Zoom lens and imaging apparatus

ABSTRACT

A zoom lens includes a negative first lens group, a positive second lens group, and a subsequent lens group in order from an object side. A focusing lens group closer to an image side than the first lens group moves during focusing. The first lens group consists of a first-a lens group and a first-b lens group in order from the object side. Assuming that an average of refractive indices of the negative lenses of the first-a lens group is Nd1ave, a focal length of the focusing lens group is ff, and a focal length of the first lens group is f1, Conditional Expression (1) of 1.73&lt;Nd1ave&lt;1.95 and Conditional Expression (2) of 1&lt;|ff/f1|&lt;3 are satisfied.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

The present application is a Continuation of U.S. patent applicationSer. No. 17/929,979, filed on Sep. 6, 2022, which Continuation of U.S.patent application Ser. No. 17/139,202, filed on Dec. 31, 2020, which isa Continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/355,942, filed onMar. 18, 2019, which claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119 to JapanesePatent Application No. 2018-064597, filed on Mar. 29, 2018. The aboveapplication is hereby expressly incorporated by reference, in itsentirety, into the present application.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1. Field of the Invention

The present invention relates to a zoom lens and an imaging apparatus.

2. Description of the Related Art

In the related art, a wide-angle zoom lens is used as an imaging lenssuch as a digital camera. A configuration in which a first lens grouphaving a negative refractive power, a second lens group having apositive refractive power, and a subsequent lens group are arranged inorder from an object side to an image side has been known as aconfiguration of the wide-angle zoom lens. For example, inJP2016-090748A, JP2013-015621A, JP2015-203735A, and JP2015-138122A, alens system having the same or similar configuration as or to theaforementioned configuration is described as a lens system considering awide angle.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

In recent years, there is an increasing need for a small-size imagingapparatus with a wide angle of view. To meet this need, it is necessaryto achieve reduction in size of the first lens group of which a lensdiameter is likely to be increased and is closest to the object sidelikely to be increased in lens diameter, reduction in size of a lensgroup (hereinafter, referred to as a focusing lens group) which movesduring focusing, and reduction in size of the entire lens systemincluding a decrease in movement amount of the focusing lens group.

However, in the zoom lens described in JP2016-090748A, a negative lensdisposed so as to be closer to the object side within the first lensgroup is made of a low-dispersion material. Since the low-dispersionmaterial has a low refractive index, an average refractive index of thefirst lens group becomes low, and thus, it is difficult to achieve thewide angle. For example, in a case where there is an attempt to achievethe wide angle while maintaining a condition in which the low-dispersionmaterial described in JP2016-090748A is used, absolute values of radiiof curvature of three negative lenses disposed so as to be close to theobject side within the first lens group become small, and thus,aberration occurring in the first lens group is increased.Alternatively, the diameter of the lens constituting the first lensgroup becomes large.

In the zoom lens described in JP2013-015621A, the focusing lens group isdisposed so as to be close to the image side within the first lensgroup. Since the outer diameter and weight of the lens disposed withinthe first lens group are large, a driving actuator is also large, andthus, the size of the entire imaging apparatus is increased. It isnecessary to widen a distance between the focusing lens group and thelens group disposed so as to be close to the object side within thefirst lens group in order to secure a stroke for focusing, that is, themovement amount of the focusing lens group. However, in a case wherethis distance is widened, there is a problem that the outer diameter ofthe lens closest to the object side and the outer diameter of the lensdisposed so as to be close to the object side within the first lensgroup become large. The zoom lens described in JP2013-015621A has also aproblem that the movement amount of the focusing lens group is increaseddue to a low refractive power of the focusing lens group.

The zoom lens described in JP2015-203735A has a configuration in whichthe focusing lens group is disposed so as to be close to the image sidewithin the lens group which is disposed so as to be closest to theobject side and is fixed during zooming. The zoom lens described inJP2015-203735A has also a problem that the movement amount of thefocusing lens group is increased due to the low refractive power of thefocusing lens group.

In the zoom lens described in JP2015-138122A, the second lens group isthe focusing lens group. However, there is a problem that the movementamount of the focusing lens group is increased due to the low refractivepower of the focusing lens group.

The present invention has been made in view of the aforementionedcircumstances, and an object of the present is to provide a small-sizezoom lens having high optical performance while obtaining a wide angleof view and an imaging apparatus comprising the zoom lens.

In order to solve the problem, a zoom lens of the present inventionconsists of, in order from an object side to an image side, a first lensgroup having a negative refractive power, a second lens group having apositive refractive power, and a subsequent lens group. Mutual distancesbetween the first lens group, the second lens group, and the subsequentlens group change due to movement of at least the first lens group andthe second lens group during zooming, a focusing lens group disposed soas to be closer to the image side than the first lens group moves duringfocusing from an object at infinity from an object within a short range,the first lens group consists of, in order from the object side to theimage side, a first-a lens group consisting of three negative lenses,and a first-b lens group including at least one negative lens and atleast one positive lens, a distance between the first-a lens group andthe first-b lens group does not change either during zooming or duringfocusing, and assuming that an average value of refractive indices ofthe three negative lenses of the first-a lens group at a d line isNd1ave, a focal length of the focusing lens group is ff, and a focallength of the first lens group is f1, Conditional Expressions (1) and(2) are satisfied.

1.73<Nd1ave<1.95   (1)

1≤|ff/f1|<3   (2)

In the zoom lens of the present invention, it is preferable that thefocusing lens group consists of three or more lenses.

In the zoom lens of the present invention, it is preferable thatassuming that a transverse magnification of the focusing lens group in astate in which the object at infinity at a wide-angle end is in focus isβfw, a combined transverse magnification of all the lenses closer to theimage side than the focusing lens group in a state in which the objectat infinity at the wide-angle end is in focus is βrw, and the βrw is 1in a case where there is no lens disposed so as to be closer to theimage side than the focusing lens group, Conditional Expression (3) issatisfied.

0.6<|(1−βfw ²)×βrw ²|<2.3   (3)

In the zoom lens of the present invention, it is preferable that thesubsequent lens group includes a lens group which moves by changing adistance from the adjacent lens group during zooming and has a negativerefractive power.

In the zoom lens of the present invention, it is preferable that thefocusing lens group is a part of the subsequent lens group or the entiresubsequent lens group. It is preferable that the focusing lens group hasa negative refractive power.

In the zoom lens of the present invention, it is preferable thatassuming that a minimum value of the refractive indices of the threenegative lenses of the first-a lens group at the d line is Nd1amin,Conditional Expression (4) is satisfied.

1.52<Nd1amin<1.89   (4)

In the zoom lens of the present invention, it is preferable thatassuming that an Abbe number of at least one lens included in thefocusing lens group with the d line as a reference is vdf, ConditionalExpression (5) is satisfied.

60<vdf   (5)

In the zoom lens of the present invention, it is preferable thatassuming that an Abbe number of at least one negative lens included inthe first-b lens group with the d line as a reference is vd1bn,Conditional Expression (6) is satisfied.

60<vd1bn   (6)

In the zoom lens of the present invention, it is preferable thatassuming that a refractive index of the lens disposed so as to beclosest to the object side at the d line is Nd1, Conditional Expression(7) is satisfied.

1.7<Nd1<2.1   (7)

In the zoom lens of the present invention, it is preferable thatassuming that an on-axis air-equivalent distance from a lens surfaceclosest to the image side to an image plane in a state in which theobject at infinity at the wide-angle end is in focus is BFw, a focallength of the zoom lens in a state in which the object at infinity atthe wide-angle end is in focus is fw, and a maximum half-angle of viewin a state in which the object at infinity at the wide-angle end is infocus is cow, Conditional Expression (8) is satisfied.

0.5<BFw/(fw=tan ωw)<1.5   (8)

In the zoom lens of the present invention, it is preferable thatassuming that a maximum half-angle of view in a state in which theobject at infinity at the wide-angle end is in focus is cow and an openF number at the wide-angle end is FNow, Conditional Expression (9) issatisfied.

0.45<tan ωw/FNow<1   (9)

In the zoom lens of the present invention, it is preferable thatassuming that a radius of curvature of an object-side lens surface ofthe lens disposed so as to be closest to the object side is R1 and aradius of curvature of an image-side lens surface of the lens disposedso as to be closest to the object side is R2, Conditional Expression(10) is satisfied.

3.3<(R1+R2)/(R1−R2)<5.5   (10)

In the zoom lens of the present invention, it is preferable thatassuming that the focal length of the first lens group is f1 and a focallength of the second lens group is f2, Conditional Expression (11) issatisfied.

0.2<|f1/f2|<0.65   (11)

In the zoom lens of the present invention, it is preferable thatassuming that a focal length of the first-a lens group is f1a and afocal length of the first-b lens group is f1b, Conditional Expression(12) is satisfied.

0.02<|f1a/f1b|<0.15   (12)

In the zoom lens of the present invention, it is preferable that thesubsequent lens group includes a lens group closest to the image side,of which a distance from the adjacent lens group changes during zooming,and which has a positive refractive power.

In the zoom lens of the present invention, it is preferable that thelens group closest to the image side and has the positive refractivepower within the subsequent lens group is fixed with respect to an imageplane during zooming and during focusing.

In the zoom lens of the present invention, it is preferable that thesubsequent lens group consists of an intermediate lens group whichconsists of one or two lens groups and has a positive refractive poweras a whole, the focusing lens group having a negative refractive power,and a lens group having a positive refractive power in order from theobject side to the image side, and a distance of each of the one or twolens groups within the intermediate lens group, the focusing lens group,and the lens group which is disposed so as to be closest to the imageside and has the positive refractive power from the adjacent lens groupchanges during zooming.

In the zoom lens of the present invention, it is preferable that thefirst-b lens group is composed of two lenses consisting of a negativelens and a positive lens in order from the object side to the imageside.

An imaging apparatus according to the present embodiment comprises thezoom lens according to the present invention.

In the present description, it should be noted that the terms“consisting of ˜” and “consists of ˜” mean that the imaging lens mayinclude not only the above-mentioned elements but also lensessubstantially having no refractive power, optical elements, which arenot lenses, such as a stop, a filter, and a cover glass, and mechanismparts such as a lens flange, a lens barrel, an imaging element, and acamera shake correction mechanism in addition to the illustratedconstituent elements.

In the present description, the term “˜ group that has a positiverefractive power” means that the group has a positive refractive poweras a whole. Likewise, the term “˜ group that has a negative refractivepower” means that the group has a negative refractive power as a whole.The “lens having a positive refractive power” and the “positive lens”are synonymous. The “lens having a negative refractive power” and the“negative lens” are synonymous. The “lens group” is not limited to aconfiguration consisting of a plurality of lenses, and may consist ofonly one lens. It is assumed that a reference sign of a refractive powerrelated to a lens including an aspherical surface, a surface shape of alens surface, and a radius of curvature are considered in paraxialregion unless otherwise noted. As a reference sign of a radius ofcurvature, a reference sign of a radius curvature of a surface having ashape in which a convex surface faces the object side is set to bepositive, and a reference sign of a radius of curvature of a surfacehaving a shape in which a convex surface faces the image side is set tobe negative. The “focal length” used in Conditional Expressions is aparaxial focal length. The values in Conditional Expressions are valuesin a case where the d line is used as the reference. The “d line”, “Cline”, “F line”, and “g line” described in the present specification arebright lines. A wavelength of the d line is 587.56 nm (nanometers), awavelength of the C line is 656.27 nm (nanometers), a wavelength of theF line is 486.13 nm (nanometers), and a wavelength of the g line is435.84 nm (nanometers).

According to the present invention, it is possible to provide asmall-size zoom lens having high optical performance while obtaining awide angle of view and an imaging apparatus comprising the zoom lens.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a diagram showing an optical path and a cross section of alens configuration of a zoom lens according to an embodiment of thepresent invention, and a movement locus.

FIG. 2 is a diagram showing cross sections of lens configurations of azoom lens according to Example 1 of the present invention at awide-angle end and at a telephoto end and movement loci.

FIG. 3 is a diagram showing cross sections of lens configurations of azoom lens according to Example 2 of the present invention at thewide-angle end and at the telephoto end and movement loci.

FIG. 4 is a diagram showing cross sections of lens configurations of azoom lens according to Example 3 of the present invention at thewide-angle end and at the telephoto end and movement loci.

FIG. 5 is a diagram showing cross sections of lens configurations of azoom lens according to Example 4 of the present invention at thewide-angle end and at the telephoto end and movement loci.

FIG. 6 is a diagram showing cross sections of lens configurations of azoom lens according to Example 5 of the present invention at thewide-angle end and at the telephoto end and movement loci.

FIG. 7 is a diagram showing cross sections of lens configurations of azoom lens according to Example 6 of the present invention at thewide-angle end and at the telephoto end and movement loci.

FIG. 8 is a diagram showing cross sections of lens configurations of azoom lens according to Example 7 of the present invention at thewide-angle end and at the telephoto end and movement loci.

FIG. 9 is a diagram showing cross sections of lens configurations of azoom lens according to Example 8 of the present invention at thewide-angle end and at the telephoto end and movement loci.

FIG. 10 is a diagram showing cross sections of lens configurations of azoom lens according to Example 9 of the present invention at thewide-angle end and at the telephoto end and movement loci.

FIG. 11 is a diagram showing cross sections of lens configurations of azoom lens according to Example 10 of the present invention at thewide-angle end and at the telephoto end and movement loci.

FIG. 12 is a diagram showing cross sections of lens configurations of azoom lens according to Example 11 of the present invention at thewide-angle end and at the telephoto end and movement loci.

FIG. 13 shows aberration diagrams of the zoom lens according to Example1 of the present invention.

FIG. 14 shows aberration diagrams of the zoom lens according to Example2 of the present invention.

FIG. 15 shows aberration diagrams of the zoom lens according to Example3 of the present invention.

FIG. 16 shows aberration diagrams of the zoom lens according to Example4 of the present invention.

FIG. 17 shows aberration diagrams of the zoom lens according to Example5 of the present invention.

FIG. 18 shows aberration diagrams of the zoom lens according to Example6 of the present invention.

FIG. 19 shows aberration diagrams of the zoom lens according to Example7 of the present invention.

FIG. 20 shows aberration diagrams of the zoom lens according to Example8 of the present invention.

FIG. 21 shows aberration diagrams of the zoom lens according to Example9 of the present invention.

FIG. 22 shows aberration diagrams of the zoom lens according to Example10 of the present invention.

FIG. 23 shows aberration diagrams of the zoom lens according to Example11 of the present invention.

FIG. 24 is a perspective view of an imaging apparatus according to theembodiment of the present invention when viewed from a front side.

FIG. 25 is a perspective view of the imaging apparatus according to theembodiment of the present invention when viewed from a rear side.

DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

Hereinafter, embodiments of the present invention will be described withreference to drawings. FIG. 1 shows an optical path and across-sectional view at a wide-angle end of a zoom lens according to anembodiment of the present invention. The example shown in FIG. 1corresponds to the zoom lens according to Example 1 to be describedlater. FIG. 1 shows a state where an object at infinity is in focus,where the left side of the drawing is an object side and the right sideof the drawing is an image side, and shows on-axis rays 2 andmaximum-view-angle rays 3 for the optical path.

In FIG. 1 , it is assumed that the zoom lens is applied to the imagingapparatus, and an example in which an optical member PP having anincident surface and an exit surface parallel to each other is disposedbetween the zoom lens and an image plane Sim is illustrated. The opticalmember PP is a member assumed to include various filters and/or a coverglass. The various filters are, for example, a low-pass filter, aninfrared cut filter, and a filter for cutting a specific wavelengthrange. The optical member PP is a member having no refractive power, andthe optical member PP may be omitted.

The zoom lens according to the present embodiment consists of a firstlens group G1 having a negative refractive power, a second lens group G2having a positive refractive power, and a subsequent lens group GR inorder from the object side to the image side along an optical axis Z.During zooming from the wide-angle end to a telephoto end, at least thefirst lens group G1 and the second lens group G2 move, and thus, mutualdistances between the first lens group G1, the second lens group G2, andthe subsequent lens group GR in an optical axis direction change.

For example, the subsequent lens group GR of FIG. 1 is composed of threelens groups consisting of the third lens group G3, the fourth lens groupG4, and the fifth lens group G5 in order from the object side to theimage side. The mutual distances between the third lens group G3, thefourth lens group G4, and the fifth lens group G5 in the optical axisdirection change during zooming. In the example of FIG. 1 , duringzooming, the first lens group G1, the second lens group G2, the thirdlens group G3, and the fourth lens group G4 move, and the fifth lensgroup G5 is fixed with respect to the image plane Sim. In FIG. 1 , undereach lens group moving during zooming, a schematic movement locus ofeach lens group during zooming from the wide-angle end to the telephotoend is represented by an arrow, a ground symbol is represented under thefifth lens group G5.

For example, FIG. 1 shows a configuration in which an aperture stop Stis disposed on a surface of the second lens group G2 closest to theobject side. There are advantages in achieving a wide angle and reducinga diameter of a lens system by disposing the aperture stop St in thismanner.

In the zoom lens according to the present embodiment, a focusing lensgroup Gf disposed so as to be closer to the image side than the firstlens group G1 moves during focusing from an object at infinity to anobject within a short range. In the example shown in FIG. 1 , only thefocusing lens group Gf moves during focusing. Focusing is performed bythe lens group closer to the image side than the first lens group G1,and thus, it is easy to construct the focusing lens group Gf with asmall size and a light weight. Accordingly, there is an advantage inincreasing an autofocusing speed.

It is preferable that the focusing lens group Gf is a part of thesubsequent lens group GR or the entire subsequent lens group GR in viewof the following circumstances. As stated above, it is preferable thatthe focusing lens group Gf is disposed so as to be closer to the imageside than the first lens group G1 in order to construct the focusinglens group Gf with a small size and a light weight such that theautofocusing speed can be increased. As for a positional relationshipbetween the focusing lens group Gf and the second lens group G2, it isconsidered that the focusing lens group Gf is a part of the second lensgroup G2 or the entire second lens group G2. However, it is notpreferable that a change in angle of view and a change in distortionbecome large along with the movement of the focusing lens group Gf insuch a case. In a case where the change in angle of view and the changein distortion are large along with the movement of the focusing lensgroup Gf, there is a problem that a photographer feels these changes tobe obstacles to view during a focusing operation and a wobblingoperation. From the above, it is preferable that the focusing lens groupGf is disposed within the subsequent lens group GR.

For example, the entire fourth lens group G4 is the focusing lens groupGf in the zoom lens shown in FIG. 1 . An arrow pointing an image-sidedirection under the fourth lens group G4 of FIG. 1 means that the fourthlens group G4 moves toward the image side during focusing from theobject at infinity to the object within the short range.

It is preferable that the focusing lens group Gf has a negativerefractive power. As stated above, it is preferable that the focusinglens group Gf is disposed so as to be closer to the image side than thefirst lens group G1, that is, between an object-side surface of thesecond lens group G2 closest to the object side and an image-sidesurface of the lens group closest to the image side in order to reducethe size of the focusing lens group Gf. Since a refractive power of asynthetic optical system is a positive value from the second lens groupG2 to the lens group closest to the image side, the refractive power ofthe focusing lens group Gf can be increased by using the lens grouphaving a negative refractive power of a different sign as the focusinglens group Gf, as opposed to using the lens group having the positiverefractive power which is acquired by dividing the refractive power ofthe synthetic optical system as the focusing lens group Gf. Since thefocusing lens group Gf has a high refractive power, it is possible todecrease a movement amount of the focusing lens group Gf, and it ispossible to reduce the size of the entire lens system.

It is preferable that the focusing lens group Gf consists of three ormore lenses. The focusing lens group Gf is composed of three or morelenses, and thus, it is possible to decrease a variation in aberrationduring focusing. For example, the focusing lens group Gf may consist oftwo positive lenses and two negative lenses. In this case, the focusinglens group Gf may consist of a positive lens, a negative lens, apositive lens, and a negative lens in order from the object side to theimage side. In this case, three lenses on the image side may be joinedtogether. More specifically, the focusing lens group Gf may consist of apositive meniscus lens of which a concave surface faces the object side,a negative lens of which a concave surface faces the image side, apositive lens, and a negative lens in order from the object side to theimage side. Alternatively, the focusing lens group Gf may consist of twopositive lenses and one negative lens. In this case, the focusing lensgroup Gf may consist of a positive lens, a negative lens, and a positivelens in order from the object side to the image side. In this case, twolenses on the image side may be joined together.

The first lens group G1 consists of a first-a lens group G1 a and afirst-b lens group G1 b in order from the object side to the image side.A distance between the first-a lens group G1 a and the first-b lensgroup G1 b in the optical axis direction does not change either duringzooming or during focusing. In a case where the distance between thesetwo lens groups within the first lens group G1 changes, an actuator fordriving at least one lens group and a wide distance for moving at leastone lens group are required. Accordingly, the distance between thefirst-a lens group G1 a and the first-b lens group G1 b does not changeduring zooming and during focusing, and thus, there is an advantage inreducing the size of the lens group.

The first-a lens group G1 a consists of three negative lenses. Thefirst-a lens group G1 a disposed on the object side within the firstlens group G1 consists of only the negative lens, and thus, it is easyto prevent the lens diameter of the first lens group G1 from beingincreased even in a case where the wide angle of the lens group isachieved. It is possible to favorably correct off-axis aberration byusing three negative lenses as the first-a lens group G1 a. For example,the first-a lens group G1 a consists of three negative meniscus lens ofwhich convex surfaces face the object side, and there is an advantage inachieving the wide angle while correcting the off-axis aberration insuch a case.

The first-b lens group G1 b has at least one negative lens and at leastone positive lens. As in the present embodiment, since on-axis rayheight passing through the first lens group G1 on a wide-angle side islow and the on-axis ray height becomes high as the lens group becomesclose to a telephoto side in the zoom lens comprising the first lensgroup G1 having the negative refractive power and the second lens groupG2 having the positive refractive power, a variation in chromaticaberration along with zooming is easy to be large. Thus, the first-blens group G1 b which includes at least one negative lens and at leastone positive lens on the image side on which the on-axis ray heightbecomes higher and has an achromatic effect is disposed within the firstlens group G1. In this configuration, it is possible to decrease achange in longitudinal chromatic aberration along with zooming.

More specifically, it is preferable that the first-b lens group G1 b iscomposed of two lenses consisting of a negative lens and a positive lensin order from the object side to the image side. In such aconfiguration, the negative refractive power is concentrated on theobject side within the first lens group G1, and thus, it is possible todecrease the diameter of the lens disposed so as to be closest to theobject side. The first-b lens group G1 b consists of only two lenses,and thus, it is possible to reduce the size and weight thereof. Forexample, the first-b lens group G1 b can consist of a biconcave lens anda positive lens of which a convex surface faces the object side. Thenegative lens and the positive lens included in the first-b lens groupG1 b may be joined together or may not be joined together.

Assuming that an average value of refractive indices of three negativelenses of the first-a lens group G1 a at a d line is Nd1ave, the zoomlens according to the present embodiment satisfies the followingConditional Expression (1). Conditional Expression (1) assumes anaverage refractive index of the three lenses disposed in the first-alens group G1 a. The resultant value is not equal to or less than alower limit of Conditional Expression (1). Thus, since an absolute valueof a radius of curvature of the negative lens disposed in the first-alens group G1 a does not become too small even in a case where the wideangle is achieved, it is possible to restrain an increase in off-axisaberration. Alternatively, the resultant value is not equal to or lessthan the lower limit of Conditional Expression (1), it is possible torestrain an increase in lens diameter of the first-a lens group G1 aeven in a case where the wide angle is achieved. The resultant value isnot equal to or greater than an upper limit of Conditional Expression(1), and thus, it is possible to restrain a dispersion of the negativelens of the first-a lens group G1 a from being too large, particularly,there is an advantage in correcting lateral chromatic aberration on thewide-angle side. It is possible to obtain more favorable characteristicsin a case where the zoom lens satisfies the following ConditionalExpression (1-1), and it is possible to obtain still more favorablecharacteristics in a case where the zoom lens satisfies the followingConditional Expression (1-2).

1.73<Nd1ave<1.95   (1)

1.75<Nd1ave<1.93   (1-1)

1.77<Nd1ave<1.91   (1-2)

Assuming that a focal length of the focusing lens group Gf is ff and afocal length of the first lens group G1 is f1, the zoom lens accordingto the present embodiment satisfies the following Conditional Expression(2). Conditional Expression (2) assumes the relationship between thefocal length of the focusing lens group Gf and the focal length of thefirst lens group G1. The resultant value is not equal to or less than alower limit of Conditional Expression (2), and thus, the refractivepower of the first lens group G1 does not become too low. Accordingly,there is an advantage in restraining the increase in lens diameter ofthe first lens group G1 or decreasing the movement amount of the firstlens group G1 along with zooming. Alternatively, the resultant value isnot equal to or less than the lower limit of Conditional Expression (2),and thus, the refractive power of the focusing lens group Gf does notbecome too high. Accordingly, it is possible to restrain an increase infield curvature or it is possible to restrain a variation in fieldcurvature along with the movement of the focusing lens group Gf. Theresultant value is not equal to or greater than an upper limit ofConditional Expression (2), and thus, the refractive power of the firstlens group G1 does not become too high, it is easy to correct distortionand astigmatism. Alternatively, the resultant value is not equal to orgreater than the upper limit of Conditional Expression (2), and thus,the refractive power of the focusing lens group Gf does not become toolow. Accordingly, it is possible to decrease the movement amount of thefocusing lens group Gf during focusing. It is possible to obtain morefavorable characteristics in a case where the zoom lens satisfies thefollowing Conditional Expression (2-1), and it is possible to obtainstill more favorable characteristics in a case where the zoom lenssatisfies the following Conditional Expression (2-2).

1<|ff/f1|<3   (2)

1.1<|ff/f1|<2.9   (2-1)

1.2<|ff/f1|<2.3   (2-2)

It is preferable that the zoom lens according to the present embodimentsatisfies the following conditional expressions. Assuming that atransverse magnification of the focusing lens group Gf in a state inwhich an object at infinity at the wide-angle end is in focus is βfw, acombined transverse magnification of all the lenses closer to the imageside than the focusing lens group Gf in a state in which the object atinfinity at the wide-angle end is in focus is βrw, and βrw is 1 in acase where the lenses are not disposed so as to be closer to the imageside than the focusing lens group Gf, it is preferable that the zoomlens satisfies the following Conditional Expression (3). ConditionalExpression (3) assumes a focus movement amount with respect to themovement amount of the focusing lens group Gf. The resultant value isnot equal to or less than a lower limit of Conditional Expression (3),and thus, it is possible to decrease the movement amount of the focusinglens group Gf during focusing. Accordingly, there is an advantage inreducing the entire length of the lens system. Alternatively, theresultant value is not equal to or less than the lower limit ofConditional Expression (3), it is possible to reduce the shortestimaging distance. The resultant value is not equal to or greater than anupper limit of Conditional Expression (3), and thus, the refractivepower of the focusing lens group Gf does not become too high.Accordingly, it is possible to restrain various aberrations occurring inthe focusing lens group Gf. It is possible to obtain more favorablecharacteristics in a case where the zoom lens satisfies the followingConditional Expression (3-1), and it is possible to obtain still morefavorable characteristics in a case where the zoom lens satisfies thefollowing Conditional Expression (3-2).

0.6<|(1−βfw ²)×βrw ²|<2.3   (3)

0.8<|(1−βfw ²)×βrw ²|<2.1   (3-1)

1.1<|(1−βfw ²)×βrw ²|<1.9   (3-2)

Assuming that a minimum value of the refractive indices of the threenegative lenses of the first-a lens group G1 a at the d line is Nd1amin,it is preferable that the zoom lens satisfies Conditional Expression(4). Conditional Expression (4) assumes the minimum refractive index ofthe negative lenses disposed in the first-a lens group G1 a. It isconsidered that a material having a low dispersion is used for thenegative lens disposed in the first-a lens group G1 a in order tocorrect the lateral chromatic aberration on the wide-angle side, butsuch a material has a low refractive index. In a case where the lens ismade of the material having the low refractive index, an absolute valueof the radius of curvature is small, and thus, there is a problem thatthe increase in off-axis aberration and/or the increase in the lensdiameter. The resultant value is not equal to or less than a lower limitof Conditional Expression (4), and thus, it is possible to avoid such aproblem. The resultant value is not equal to or greater than an upperlimit of Conditional Expression (4), and thus, the dispersion of thenegative lenses of the first-a lens group G1 a does not become toolarge. Accordingly, it is easy to particularly correct the lateralchromatic aberration at the wide-angle end. It is possible to obtainmore favorable characteristics in a case where the zoom lens satisfiesthe following Conditional Expression (4-1), and it is possible to obtainstill more favorable characteristics in a case where the zoom lenssatisfies the following Conditional Expression (4-2).

1.52<Nd1amin<1.89   (4)

1.56<Nd1amin<1.86   (4-1)

Assuming that an Abbe number of at least one lens included in thefocusing lens group Gf with the d line as a reference is vdf, it ispreferable that the zoom lens satisfies the following ConditionalExpression (5). That is, it is preferable that the focusing lens groupGf has at least one lens satisfying Conditional Expression (5).Conditional Expression (5) assumes the Abbe number of at least one lensdisposed in the focusing lens group Gf. The resultant value is not equalto or less than a lower limit of Conditional Expression (5), and thus,it is possible to restrain the variation in chromatic aberration duringfocusing. It is preferable that the zoom lens satisfies the followingConditional Expression (5-1). The resultant value is not equal to orless than the lower limit of Conditional Expression (5-1), and thus, itis possible to increase an effect related to Conditional Expression (5).The resultant value is not equal to or greater than an upper limit ofConditional Expression (5-1), and thus, it is possible to secure anecessary refractive index. Accordingly, it is possible to favorablycorrect spherical aberration and astigmatism. In a case where the zoomlens satisfies the following Conditional Expression (5-2), it ispossible to obtain more favorable characteristics.

60<vdf   (5)

64<vdf<98   (5-1)

68<vdf<85   (5-2)

Assuming that an Abee number of at least one negative lens included inthe first-b lens group G1 b with the d line as the reference is vd1bn,it is preferable that the zoom lens satisfies the following ConditionalExpression (6). That is, it is preferable that the first-b lens group G1b has at least one negative lens satisfying Conditional Expression (6).Conditional Expression (6) assumes the Abbe number of at least onenegative lens disposed in the first-b lens group G1 b . The resultantvalue is not equal to or less than a lower limit of ConditionalExpression (6), and thus, it is possible to restrain the variation inlongitudinal chromatic aberration during zooming. Alternatively, theresultant value is not equal to or less than the lower limit ofConditional Expression (6), and thus, it is possible to favorablycorrect the lateral chromatic aberration on the wide-angle side. It ispreferable that the zoom lens satisfies the following ConditionalExpression (6-1). The resultant value is not equal to or less than alower limit of Conditional Expression (6-1), and thus, it is possible toincrease an effect related to Conditional Expression (6). The resultantvalue is not equal to or greater than an upper limit of ConditionalExpression (6-1), and thus, it is possible to secure a necessaryrefractive index. Accordingly, it is possible to favorably correctvarious aberrations such as spherical aberration. In a case where thezoom lens satisfies the following Conditional Expression (6-2), it ispossible to still more favorable characteristics.

60<vd1bn   (6)

66<vd1bn<100   (6-1)

68<vd1bn<98   (6-2)

Assuming that the refractive index of the lens disposed so as to beclosest to the object side at the d line is Nd1, it is preferable thatthe zoom lens satisfies the following Conditional Expression (7).Conditional Expression (7) assumes the refractive index of the materialused for the lens closest to the object side. The resultant value is notequal to or less than a lower limit of Conditional Expression (7), andthus, it is easy to reduce the size of the lens closest to the objectside and decrease the entire size of the first lens group G1. Theresultant value is not equal to or greater than an upper limit ofConditional Expression (7), and thus, it is easy to correct the fieldcurvature. Alternatively, the resultant value is not equal to or greaterthan the upper limit of Conditional Expression (7), and thus, it is easyto construct the lens closest to the object side without using amaterial having a large dispersion. Accordingly, it is easy to favorablycorrect the lateral chromatic aberration.

1.7<Nd1<2.1   (7)

Assuming that an on-axis air-equivalent distance from a lens surfaceclosest to the image side to the image plane Sim in a state in which theobject at infinity at the wide-angle end is in focus is BFw, a focallength of the zoom lens in a state in which the object at infinity atthe wide-angle end is in focus is fw, and the maximum half-angle of viewin a state in which the object at infinity at the wide-angle end is infocus is cow, it is preferable that the zoom lens satisfies thefollowing Conditional Expression (8). In the example shown in FIG. 1 ,cow corresponds to an angle formed by the optical axis Z and theprincipal ray with the maximum angle of view on the object side than thelens closest to the object side. In FIG. 1 , the principal ray with themaximum angle of view is represented by a dash-dotted line within themaximum-view-angle rays 3. Conditional Expression (8) assumes therelationship between the air-equivalent distance from the lens surfaceclosest to the image side at the wide-angle end to the image plane Sim,that is, back focus, a focal length at the wide-angle end, and a halfangle of view at the wide-angle end. The resultant value is not equal toor less than a lower limit of Conditional Expression (8), and thus, itis easy to secure necessary back focus for each interchangeable-lenscamera. The resultant value is not equal to or less than the lower limitof Conditional Expression (8), and thus, it is easy to secure therefractive power of the first lens group G1 or it is easy to narrow adistance between the first lens group G1 and the second lens group G2 atthe wide-angle end. Accordingly, it is easy to reduce the size of thefirst lens group G1. The resultant value is not equal to or greater thanan upper limit of Conditional Expression (8), and thus, the back focusdoes not become too long. Accordingly, it is possible to widen a rangein which the lens can be disposed, and it is easy to provide thenecessary number of lenses for securing favorable optical performance.In a case where the back focus is long, it is necessary to increase therefractive power of the first lens group G1 in order to secure the longback focus. However, the resultant value is not equal to or greater thanthe upper limit of Conditional Expression (8), and thus, the back focusdoes not become too long. Accordingly, it is not necessary to increasethe refractive power of the first lens group G1. As a result, it is easyto particularly correct the astigmatism on the telephoto side. In a casewhere the zoom lens satisfies the following Conditional Expression(8-1), it is possible to obtain more favorable characteristics.

0.5<BFw/(fw×tan ωw)<1.5   (8)

0.6<BFw/(fw×tan ωw)<1.3   (8-1)

Assuming that the maximum half-angle of view in a state in which theobject at infinity at the wide-angle end is in focus is cow and an openF number at the wide-angle end is FNow, it is preferable that the zoomlens satisfies the following Conditional Expression (9). ConditionalExpression (9) assumes the relationship between the maximum half-angleof view and the open F number at the wide-angle end. The resultant valueis not equal to or less than a lower limit of Conditional Expression(9), and thus, it is possible to widen the angle of view at thewide-angle end or it is possible to decrease the open F number.Accordingly, it is possible to cope with a wide range of applications,and it is possible to achieve a high-value wide-angle zoom lens. Theresultant value is not equal to or greater than an upper limit ofConditional Expression (9), and thus, it is easy to restrain an increasein number of lenses and it is easy to restrain an increase in size ofthe lens system while acquiring favorable optical performance. In a casewhere the zoom lens satisfies the following Conditional Expression(9-1), it is possible to obtain more favorable characteristics.

0.45<tan ωw/FNow<1   (9)

0.46<tan ωw/FNow<0.8   (9-1)

Assuming that a radius of curvature of an object-side lens surface ofthe lens disposed so as to be closest to the object side is R1 and aradius of curvature of an image-side lens surface of the lens disposedso as to be closest to the object side is R2, it is preferable that thezoom lens satisfies the following Conditional Expression (10).Conditional Expression (10) assumes the relationship between the radiusof curvature of the object-side surface and the radius of curvature ofthe image-side surface of the lens disposed so as to be closest to theobject side, that is, a shape factor of the lens. The resultant value isnot equal to or less than a lower limit of Conditional Expression (10),and thus, it is easy to correct the astigmatism on the telephoto side.The resultant value is not equal to or greater than an upper limit ofConditional Expression (10), and thus, it is easy to favorably correctthe spherical aberration on the telephoto side. The resultant value isnot equal to or greater than the upper limit of Conditional Expression(10), and thus, the refractive power of the lens disposed so as to beclosest to the object side does not become too low. Accordingly, it iseasy to achieve the wide angle. In a case where the zoom lens satisfiesthe following Conditional Expression (10-1), it is possible to obtainmore favorable characteristics.

3.3<(R1+R2)/(R1−R2)<5.5   (10)

3.3<(R1+R2)/(R1−R2)<5   (10-1)

Assuming that the focal length of the first lens group G1 is f1 and afocal length of the second lens group G2 is f2, it is preferable thatthe zoom lens satisfies the following Conditional Expression (11).Conditional Expression (11) assumes the relationship between the focallengths of the first lens group G1 and the second lens group G2. Theresultant value is not equal to or less than a lower limit ofConditional Expression (11), and thus, the refractive power of the firstlens group G1 does not become too high. Accordingly, it is easy tocorrect the distortion and the astigmatism. Alternatively, ConditionalExpression (11) is not equal to or less than the lower limit, and thus,the refractive power of the second lens group G2 does not become toolow. Accordingly, it is easy to particularly correct the sphericalaberration on the telephoto side. The resultant value is not equal to orgreater than an upper limit of Conditional Expression (11), and thus,the refractive power of the first lens group G1 does not become too low.Accordingly, it is possible to restrain the increase in size of thefirst lens group G1 or restrain the movement amount of the first lensgroup G1 during zooming. Alternatively, the resultant value is not equalto or greater than the upper limit of Conditional Expression (11), andthus, the refractive power of the second lens group G2 does not becometoo high. Accordingly, it is easy to particularly correct the fieldcurvature on the wide-angle side. In a case where the zoom lenssatisfies the following Conditional Expression (11-1), it is possible toobtain more favorable characteristics.

0.2<|f1/f2|<0.65   (11)

0.25<|f1/f2|<0.63   (11-1)

Assuming that a focal length of the first-a lens group G1 a is f1a, afocal length of the first-b lens group G1 b is f1b, it is preferablethat the zoom lens satisfies the following Conditional Expression (12).Conditional Expression (12) assumes the relationship between the focallength of the first-a lens group G1 a and the focal length of thefirst-b lens group G1 b . The resultant value is not equal to or lessthan a lower limit of Conditional Expression (12), and thus, arefractive power of the first-b lens group G1 b does not become too low.Accordingly, it is easy to correct the distortion. The resultant valueis not equal to or greater than an upper limit of Conditional Expression(12), and thus, the refractive power of the first-b lens group G1 b doesnot become too high. Accordingly, it is easy to decrease the diameter ofthe lens disposed so as to be closest to the object side. It is possibleto obtain more favorable characteristics in a case where the zoom lenssatisfies the following Conditional Expression (12-1), and it ispossible to obtain still more favorable characteristics in a case wherethe zoom lens satisfies the following Conditional Expression (12-2).

0.02<|f1a/f1b|<0.15   (12)

0.03<|f1a/f1b|<0.12   (12-1)

0.04<|f1a/f1b|<0.1   (12-2)

Next, the subsequent lens group GR will be described. It is preferablethat the subsequent lens group GR includes a lens group which moves bychanging a distance from the adjacent lens group during zooming and hasa negative refractive power. The second lens group G2 is disposed so asto be adjacent to the subsequent lens group GR, and a lens group havinga refractive power of a sign different from the sign of the refractivepower of the second lens group G2 is disposed within the subsequent lensgroup. Thus, it is possible to improve a zooming effect. The lens groupseach having a negative refractive power are provided on the object sideand the image side of the second lens group G2, and thus, there is anadvantage in correcting the off-axis aberration.

It is preferable that the subsequent lens group GR includes a lens groupclosest to the image side, of which a distance from the adjacent lensgroup changes during zooming, and which has a positive refractive power.In the wide-angle zoom lens, an incidence angle of the principal raywith the maximum angle of view on the image plane Sim is easy to beparticularly large at the wide-angle end. The lens group having thepositive refractive power is disposed in the position closest to theimage side, and thus, it is easy to decrease the incidence angle of theprincipal ray with the maximum angle of view on the image plane Sim.

In a case where the subsequent lens group GR includes the lens groupclosest to the image side and has the positive refractive power, it ispreferable that the lens group closest to the image side and has thepositive refractive power is fixed with respect to the image plane Simduring zooming and during focusing. The lens group in the positionclosest to the image side is fixed, and thus, it is possible to restraindust from entering the zoom lens.

It is preferable that the lens group closest to the image side and hasthe positive refractive power within the subsequent lens group GR isfixed with respect to the image plane Sim during zooming and duringfocusing and consists of one lens. Since a diameter of a ray passingthrough the lens group disposed so as to be closest to the image sidebecomes small, the burden of aberration correction is not large, andthus, it is preferable that this lens group is composed of a smallnumber of lenses. The lens group disposed so as to be closest to theimage side is composed of only one lens, and thus, there is an advantagein reducing the size thereof.

It is preferable that the subsequent lens group GR consists of anintermediate lens group Gm which consists of one or two lens groups andhas a positive refractive power as a whole, a focusing lens group Gfhaving a negative refractive power, and a lens group having a positiverefractive power in order from the object side to the image side. In theexample shown in FIG. 1 , the third lens group G3 corresponds to theintermediate lens group Gm. Each of the one or two lens groups withinthe intermediate lens group Gm, the focusing lens group Gf, and the lensgroup which is disposed in the position closest to the image side andhas the positive refractive power is a lens group of which the distancefrom the adjacent lens group change during zooming. That is, it ispreferable that the zoom lens according to the present embodimentconsists of the first lens group G1 having the negative refractivepower, the second lens group G2 having the positive refractive power,the intermediate lens group Gm, the focusing lens group Gf having thenegative refractive power, and the lens group having the positiverefractive power in order from the object side to the image side. Thezoom lens has five to six lens groups in which the mutual distancestherebetween change during zooming, and thus, it is possible tofavorably correct aberration in the entire zoom range, particularly, thefield curvature while restraining a manufacturing difficulty level frombeing increased by restraining the occurrence of eccentric comaaberration caused by a manufacturing error.

In the example of FIG. 1 , the number of lens groups in which the mutualdistance changes during zooming and constitute the subsequent lens groupGR is three. However, in the technology of the present disclosure, thenumber of lens groups constituting the subsequent lens group GR may beanother number. The number of lens groups is one or more and four orless in order to reduce the size thereof and achieve high performance.

FIG. 1 illustrates the example in which the optical member PP isdisposed between the lens system and the image plane Sim. However,various filters may be disposed between the lenses instead of disposingthe low-pass filter and/or the various filters for shielding rays with aspecific wavelength range between the lens system and the image planeSim, or the lens surface of any of the lenses may be coated so as tohave the same functions as the various filters.

The above-mentioned preferred configurations and availableconfigurations may be any combinations, and it is preferable that theconfigurations are selectively adopted in accordance with requiredspecification. According to the present embodiment, it is possible torealize the small-size zoom lens having high optical performance whileobtaining the wide angle of view. The “wide angle of view” mentionedherein means that the maximum full-angle of view at the wide-angle endis higher than 120 degrees.

Next, numerical examples of the zoom lens according to the presentinvention will be described.

EXAMPLE 1

Cross-sectional views of a zoom lens according to Example 1 andschematic movement loci are shown in FIG. 2 . FIG. 2 shows a state wherethe object at infinity is in focus, where the left side of the drawingis the object side and the right side of the drawing is the image side.In FIG. 2 , a wide-angle end state is represented at an upper partlabeled by “wide-angle end”, and a telephoto end state is represented ata lower part labeled by “telephoto end”. Between the upper part and thelower part of FIG. 2 , the schematic movement locus of each lens groupin a case where zooming from the wide-angle end to the telephoto end isperformed is represented by an arrow for each lens group moving duringzooming, and a ground symbol is represented for the lens group fixedwith respect to the image plane sim during zooming.

The zoom lens according to Example 1 consists of a first lens group G1having a negative refractive power, a second lens group G2 having apositive refractive power, a third lens group G3 having a positiverefractive power, a fourth lens group G4 having a negative refractivepower, and a fifth lens group G5 having a positive refractive power inorder from the object side to the image side. During zooming from thewide-angle end to the telephoto end, the first lens group G1 moves tothe image side, the second lens group G2, the third lens group G3, andthe fourth lens group G4 move to the object side, and the fifth lensgroup G5 is fixed on to the image plane Sim. Thus, all the distancesbetween the adjacent lens groups change. The first lens group G1consists of five lenses such as lenses L11 to L15 in order from theobject side to the image side, the second lens group G2 consists of theaperture stop St and five lenses such as lenses L21 to L25 in order fromthe object side to the image side, the third lens group G3 consists offive lenses such as lenses L31 to L35 in order from the object side tothe image side, the fourth lens group G4 consists of four lenses such aslenses L41 to L44 in order from the object side to the image side, andthe fifth lens group G5 consists of one lens such as a lens L51. Thefocusing lens group Gf is the entire fourth lens group G4. Similarly toFIG. 1 , an arrow pointing the image-side direction is represented underthe lens group corresponding to the focusing lens group Gf in FIG. 2 .The outline of the zoom lens according to Example 1 has been describedabove.

Table 1 shows basic lens data of the zoom lens according to Example 1,Table 2 shows specifications and variable surface distances, and Table 3shows aspherical surface coefficients thereof. In Table 1, the column ofSn shows surface numbers. The surface closest to the object side is thefirst surface, and the surface numbers increase one by one toward theimage side. The column of R shows radii of curvature of the respectivesurfaces. The column of D shows surface distances on the optical axisbetween the respective surfaces and the surfaces adjacent to the imageside. Further, the column of Nd shows a refractive index of eachconstituent element with the d line as the reference, the column of vdshows an Abbe number of each constituent element at the d line, and thecolumn of egF shows a partial dispersion ratio of each constituentelement between the g line and the F line. It should be noted that thepartial dispersion ratio egF between the g line and the F line of acertain lens is defined by egF=(Ng−NF)/(NF−NC), where the refractiveindices of the lens at the g line, F line, and C line are Ng, NF, andNC, respectively.

In Table 1, a reference sign of a radius curvature of a surface having ashape in which a convex surface faces the object side is set to bepositive, and a reference sign of a radius of curvature of a surfacehaving a shape in which a convex surface faces the image side is set tobe negative. Table 1 additionally shows the aperture stop St and theoptical member PP. In Table 1, in a place of a surface number of asurface corresponding to the aperture stop St, the surface number and aterm of (St) are noted. A value at the bottom place of D in Table 1indicates a distance between the image plane Sim and the surface closestto the image side in the table. In Table 1, the variable surfacedistances are referenced by the reference signs DD[ ], and are writteninto places of D, where object side surface numbers of distances arenoted in [ ].

In Table 2, values of the zoom ratio Zr, the focal length f of theentire system, the F number FNo., the maximum total angle of view 2ω,and the variable surface distance are represented with the d line as thereference. (°) in the place of 2ω indicates that the unit thereof is adegree. In Table 2, values in a state in which the object at infinity atthe wide-angle end is in focus, in a state in which the object atinfinity at the telephoto end is in focus, in a state in which an objectat a distance of 500 mm (millimeters) from the image plane at thewide-angle end is in focus, and in a state in which an object at adistance of 500 mm (millimeters) from the image plane at the telephotoend is in focus are represented in the columns of W-Infinity,T-Infinity, W-500 mm, and T-500 mm, respectively. f in the column ofW-Infinity corresponds to fw used in the aforementioned ConditionalExpression.

In Table 1, the reference sign * is attached to surface numbers ofaspherical surfaces, and numerical values of the paraxial radius ofcurvature are written into the column of the radius of curvature of theaspherical surface. In Table 3, the column of Sn shows surface numbersof aspherical surfaces, and the columns of KA and Am (m=3, 4, 5, . . . )show numerical values of the aspherical surface coefficients of theaspherical surfaces. The “E±n” (n: an integer) in numerical values ofthe aspherical surface coefficients of Table 3 indicates “×10^(±n)”. KAand Am are aspherical surface coefficients in an aspherical surfaceexpression expressed in the following expression.

Zd=C×h ²/{1+(1−KA×C ² ×h ²)^(1/2) }+ΣAm×h ^(m)

Here, Zd is an aspherical surface depth (a length of a perpendicularfrom a point on an aspherical surface at height h to a plane that isperpendicular to the optical axis and contacts with the vertex of theaspherical surface),

h is a height (a distance from the optical axis to the lens surface),

C is a reciprocal of paraxial curvature radius,

KA and Am are aspherical surface coefficients, and Σ in the asphericalsurface expression means the sum with respect to m.

In data of each table, a degree is used as a unit of an angle, and mm(millimeter) is used as a unit of a length, but appropriate differentunits may be used since the optical system can be used even in a casewhere the system is enlarged or reduced in proportion. Further, each ofthe following tables shows numerical values rounded off to predetermineddecimal places.

TABLE 1 Example 1 Sn R D Nd vd θgF  1 41.94034 2.100 1.85150 40.780.56958  2 24.28157 6.178 *3 75.00000 2.500 1.69259 53.07 0.54955 *418.47265 7.784 *5 36.29274 2.100 1.85108 40.12 0.56852 *6 17.10000 8.354 7 −46.41263 1.120 1.43875 94.66 0.53402  8 26.32000 5.100 1.95375 32.320.59015  9 366.77570 DD[9]   10(St) ∞ 1.311 *11  26.26117 4.880 1.6935053.18 0.54831 *12  −35.28129 0.203 13 −57.42580 0.820 1.75500 52.320.54737 14 19.66700 2.800 1.59522 67.73 0.54426 15 137.14630 1.893 16−277.24752 0.790 1.81600 46.62 0.55682 17 29.77900 2.800 1.64769 33.790.59393 18 −67.77760 DD[18] 19 −155.86052 0.810 1.81600 46.62 0.55682 2020.41300 4.360 1.59282 68.62 0.54414 21 −35.61991 2.100 22 42.027191.010 1.85150 40.78 0.56958 23 18.24500 4.990 1.43875 94.66 0.53402 24−56.85949 0.150 25 25.78476 5.800 1.43875 94.66 0.53402 26 −25.78476DD[26] *27  −64.12560 2.690 1.85343 40.56 0.56684 *28  −21.45850 0.10029 ∞ 0.890 1.88300 40.76 0.56679 30 12.20900 5.680 1.49700 81.54 0.5374831 −177.03000 0.810 1.88300 39.22 0.57295 32 27.74373 DD[32] 33155.15267 2.500 1.94595 17.98 0.65460 34 −99.58637 8.949 35 ∞ 2.8501.51680 64.20 0.53430 36 ∞ 1.000

TABLE 2 Example 1 W-Infinity T-Infinity W-500 mm T-500 mm Zr 1.000 1.883— — f 8.238 15.516 8.195 15.327 FNo. 2.88 2.88 2.85 2.87 2ω(°) 125.882.4 126.0 82.8 DD[9] 29.531 2.986 29.531 2.986 DD[18] 3.357 2.809 3.3572.809 DD[26] 2.100 6.601 2.222 6.900 DD[32] 3.447 9.257 3.325 8.958

TABLE 3 Example 1 Sn 3 4 5 6 KA   1.0000000E+00   1.0000000E+00  1.0000000E+00   1.0000000E+00 A3   0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00  0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00 A4   1.8160996E−04   1.8468610E−04−3.5121597E−05 −5.1194646E−05 A5 −1.1335952E−05 −1.2145091E−05−1.7847803E−05 −1.8058170E−05 A6 −1.4335425E−06 −1.2166255E−06  2.3507898E−06   3.5437269E−06 A7   1.6657704E−07   7.3739848E−09  2.6791047E−07   1.0407126E−07 A8   3.7176528E−09   1.1634818E−08−4.7251861E−08 −6.5002915E−08 A9 −1.1789882E−09   1.7527294E−09−2.3578362E−09   1.5980818E−09 A10   1.6846045E−11 −2.3439242E−10  5.0985133E−10   9.6469129E−10 A11   4.9683664E−12 −2.0890135E−11  1.3769111E−11 −1.1394206E−10 A12 −1.6509787E−13   2.6854226E−12−3.4119027E−12 −3.5085860E−12 A13 −1.2889391E−14   1.1950808E−13−5.0951086E−14   1.5437474E−12 A14   5.7379998E−16 −1.6261627E−14  1.4344945E−14 −4.8263251E−14 A15   2.0021309E−17 −3.8891310E−16  1.0991901E−16 −8.5442321E−15 A16 −1.0471255E−18   5.3876680E−17−3.6564916E−17   4.8212604E−16 A17 −1.6950892E−20   6.9841033E−19−1.2242734E−19   2.0638114E−17 A18   1.0001019E−21 −9.2860078E−20  5.1534781E−20 −1.5464338E−18 A19   5.9701858E−24 −5.4301162E−22  5.2084646E−23 −1.7486813E−20 A20 −3.9636710E−25   6.5318111E−23−3.0822936E−23   1.6996115E−21 Sn 11 12 27 28 KA   1.0000000E+00  1.0000000E+00   1.0000000E+00   1.0000000E+00 A3   0.0000000E+00  0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00 A4   3.4130173E−05  6.2420625E−05 −6.0807770E−05   2.9716437E−05 A5 −2.6217914E−05−2.1062733E−05   3.6227550E−05   7.6242490E−07 A6   9.8676344E−06  8.4905269E−06 −2.5310378E−05 −1.7092045E−06 A7 −4.8898264E−07−1.1036213E−06   9.4296047E−06   4.5860772E−07 A8 −7.2967595E−07−2.5485692E−07 −1.6820493E−06   1.4557727E−08 A9   1.9381422E−07  1.1852547E−07 −6.1219487E−10 −2.5304394E−08 A10   1.5648615E−09−1.3534098E−08   5.3585618E−08   1.6289649E−09 A11 −6.6656712E−09−1.6863962E−09 −7.2268338E−09   6.6338124E−10 A12   4.6499647E−10  6.5309998E−10 −2.3410749E−10 −6.7515269E−11 A13   1.2073678E−10−4.1165896E−11   1.2768330E−10 −9.9334783E−12 A14 −1.2738591E−11−9.2191136E−12 −6.9388519E−12   1.2373518E−12 A15 −1.4421479E−12  1.4785823E−12 −6.7668240E−13   8.6500487E−14 A16   1.7978446E−13  2.0460884E−14   8.4897976E−14 −1.2293866E−14 A17   1.0435769E−14−1.6419747E−14 −9.8085392E−16 −4.0666189E−16 A18 −1.3885918E−15  6.1368314E−16 −2.5071105E−16   6.4330812E−17 A19 −3.2975909E−17  6.4961582E−17   1.3030111E−17   7.9572817E−19 A20   4.4854674E−18−4.1335786E−18 −1.9352472E−19 −1.3910445E−19

FIG. 13 shows aberration diagrams of the zoom lens according toExample 1. In FIG. 13 , in order from the left side, sphericalaberration, astigmatism, distortion, and lateral chromatic aberrationare shown. In FIG. 13 , aberration diagrams in a state in which theobject at infinity at the wide-angle end is in focus is shown in thefirst row of “wide-angle end, object at infinity”, aberration diagramsin a state in which the object at infinity at the telephoto end is infocus is shown in the second row of “telephoto end, object at infinity”,aberration diagrams in a state in which the object at the distance of500 mm (millimeters) from the image plane Sim at the wide-angle end isin focus is shown in the third row of “wide-angle end, object withinshort range (500 mm from image plane)”, and aberration diagrams in astate in which the object at the distance of 500 mm (millimeters) fromthe image plane Sim at the telephoto end is in focus is shown in thefourth row of “telephoto end, object within short range (500 mm fromimage plane)”.

In FIG. 13 , in the spherical aberration diagram, aberrations at the dline, the C line, the F line, and the g line are respectively indicatedby the solid line, the long dashed line, the short dashed line, and thedashed double-dotted line. In the astigmatism diagram, aberration in thesagittal direction at the d line is indicated by the solid line, andaberration in the tangential direction at the d line is indicated by theshort dashed line. In the distortion diagram, aberration at the d lineis indicated by the solid line. In the lateral chromatic aberrationdiagram, aberrations at the C line, the F line, and the g line arerespectively indicated by the long dashed line, the short dashed line,and the dashed double-dotted line. In the spherical aberration diagram,FNo. indicates an F number. In the other aberration diagrams, coindicates a half angle of view.

Reference signs, meanings, description methods, illustration methods ofthe respective data pieces related to Example 1 are the same as those inthe following examples unless otherwise noted. Therefore, in thefollowing description, repeated description will be omitted.

EXAMPLE 2

FIG. 3 shows cross sections and schematic movement loci of a zoom lensaccording to Example 2. The zoom lens according to Example 2 consists ofa first lens group G1 having a negative refractive power, a second lensgroup G2 having a positive refractive power, a third lens group G3having a negative refractive power, and a fourth lens group G4 having apositive refractive power in order from the object side to the imageside. During zooming from the wide-angle end to the telephoto end, thefirst lens group G1 moves to the image side, the second lens group G2and the third lens group G3 move to the object side, and the fourth lensgroup G4 is fixed on to the image plane Sim. Thus, all the distancesbetween the adjacent lens groups change. The first lens group G1consists of five lenses such as lenses L11 to L15 in order from theobject side to the image side, the second lens group G2 consists of anaperture stop St and ten lenses such as lenses L21 to L30 in order fromthe object side to the image side, the third lens group G3 consists offour lenses such as lenses L31 to L34 in order from the object side tothe image side, and the fourth lens group G4 consists of one lens suchas a lens L41. The focusing lens group Gf is the entire third lens groupG3.

Table 4 shows basic lens data of the zoom lens according to Example 2,Table 5 shows specifications and variable surface distances, Table 6shows aspherical surface coefficients thereof, and FIG. 14 showsaberration diagrams.

TABLE 4 Example 2 Sn R D Nd vd θgF  1 41.57886 2.100 1.85150 40.780.56958  2 24.25407 6.125 *3 75.00000 2.504 1.69259 53.07 0.54955 *418.47265 7.966 *5 35.69926 2.100 1.85108 40.12 0.56852 *6 17.26489 8.101 7 −46.17859 1.146 1.43875 94.66 0.53402  8 26.32898 5.100 1.95375 32.320.59015  9 262.11995 DD[9]   10(St) ∞ 1.300 *11  26.80662 4.452 1.6935053.18 0.54831 *12  −35.63650 0.566 13 −61.30614 0.820 1.75500 52.320.54737 14 20.38264 2.417 1.59522 67.73 0.54426 15 178.44871 1.659 16−317.69015 0.810 1.81600 46.62 0.55682 17 19.46256 3.500 1.64769 33.790.59393 18 −81.81627 3.300 19 −277.52941 0.810 1.83481 42.72 0.56486 2022.47336 4.482 1.59282 68.62 0.54414 21 −34.64629 2.116 22 42.238480.880 1.85150 40.78 0.56958 23 17.93578 4.893 1.43875 94.66 0.53402 24−57.98556 0.150 25 25.48677 5.959 1.43875 94.66 0.53402 26 −25.37606DD[26] *27  −60.59195 2.288 1.85135 40.10 0.56954 *28  −22.78953 0.15029 170.69147 0.890 1.88300 40.76 0.56679 30 12.07645 5.852 1.49700 81.540.53748 31 −141.73694 0.850 1.88300 40.76 0.56679 32 24.97038 DD[32] 33131.85158 2.500 1.95906 17.47 0.65993 34 −104.15265 8.943 35 ∞ 2.8501.51680 64.20 0.53430 36 ∞ 0.998

TABLE 5 Example 2 W-Infinity T-Infinity W-500 mm T-500 mm Zr 1.000 1.883— — f 8.238 15.517 8.195 15.323 FNo. 2.88 2.88 2.86 2.88 2ω (°) 125.882.2 126.0 82.6 DD[9] 29.463 3.031 29.463 3.031 DD[26] 2.200 7.022 2.3177.316 DD[32] 3.525 8.963 3.408 8.670

TABLE 6 Example 2 Sn 3 4 5 6 KA l.0000000E+00 l.0000000E+00l.0000000E+00   l.0000000E+00 A3 0.0000000E+00 0.0000000E+000.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00 A4 1.5156791E−04 1.6374914E−04−8.8814963E−05   −1.0516987E−04 A5 −9.0712096E−06   −1.7761710E−05  −1.8121361E−05   −1.9226538E−05 A6 −9.2049009E−07   1.2690117E−074.3273839E−06   5.7643749E−06 A7 1.3501012E−07 1.6616531E−072.7891184E−07   1.8068743E−07 A8 −7.0607683E−10   −2.5650069E−08  −8.3364000E−08   −1.1421078E−07 A9 −9.3380967E−10   3.2446511E−09−2.6690256E−09   −7.2236724E−10 A10 3.7112077E−11 −3.7601892E−10  9.0189314E−10   1.6310740E−09 A11 3.8730063E−12 1.0528382E−111.7826049E−11 −7.7246524E−11 A12 −2.1801993E−13   2.4804841E−12−6.1170327E−12   −9.2933398E−12 A13 −1.0001266E−14   −2.2284338E−13  −7.7659318E−14     1.2135241E−12 A14 6.5297267E−16 3.1132163E−152.6275845E−14 −1.5859194E−14 A15 1.5600421E−17 4.2397882E−161.9733519E−16 −6.8377351E−15 A16 −1.1114900E−18   −3.3465602E−17  −6.8550768E−17     3.6853799E−16 A17 −1.3315482E−20   9.4421093E−19−2.5653251E−19     1.5918878E−17 A18 1.0237693E−21 3.1045963E−209.8373488E−20 −1.3183203E−18 A19 4.7249477E−24 −2.3173255E−21  1.2756392E−22 −1.2072567E−20 A20 −3.9773030E−25   2.9331005E−23−5.9369543E−23     1.4970035E−21 Sn 11 12 27 28 KA l.0000000E+00l.0000000E+00 l.0000000E+00   l.0000000E+00 A3 0.0000000E+000.0000000E+00 0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00 A4 8.5013625E−063.7181176E−05 −3.2617943E−05     4.9919455E−05 A5 −1.0632579E−05  −7.1364321E−06   2.4946959E−05 −9.5939703E−06 A6 5.0286367E−063.0821562E−06 −2.6744343E−05   −1.8216522E−06 A7 −3.4509972E−07  −7.3929168E−07   1.0475990E−05   7.4076796E−07 A8 −5.4904660E−07  1.0309078E−07 −1.7888595E−06     5.4487057E−09 A9 1.9465468E−072.4163434E−08 −1.8253488E−08   −2.9098532E−08 A10 −1.2451284E−08  −1.6651615E−08   5.7224245E−08   1.8045725E−09 A11 −4.7794533E−09  2.0283161E−09 −7.1464254E−09     6.6952922E−10 A12 6.8206386E−104.7502649E−10 −2.7951142E−10   −6.6775033E−11 A13 6.1078129E−11−1.1926956E−10   1.2731880E−10 −9.3706892E−12 A14 −1.1895987E−11  −2.8048301E−12   −6.6195473E−12     1.1702961E−12 A15 −8.3816391E−13  2.4980730E−12 −6.5672099E−13     7.8505572E−14 A16 1.4724643E−13−8.1177234E−14   8.2505317E−14 −1.1326790E−14 A17 8.7093403E−15−2.4247830E−14   −1.2144609E−15   −3.6190285E−16 A18 −1.2640897E−15  1.4587642E−15 −2.3266490E−16     5.8242693E−17 A19 −3.5687348E−17  9.1266978E−17 1.3805449E−17   7.0603159E−19 A20 4.7637251E−18−7.0550367E−18   −2.5097872E−19   −1.2437938E−19

EXAMPLE 3

FIG. 4 shows cross sections and schematic movement loci of a zoom lensaccording to Example 3. The zoom lens according to Example 3 consists ofa first lens group G1 having a negative refractive power, a second lensgroup G2 having a positive refractive power, a third lens group G3having a positive refractive power, and a fourth lens group G4 having anegative refractive power in order from the object side to the imageside. During zooming from the wide-angle end to the telephoto end andthe first lens group G1 moves to the image side, the second lens groupG2, the third lens group G3, and the fourth lens group G4 move to theobject side. Thus, all the distances between the adjacent lens groupschange. The first lens group G1 consists of five lenses such as lensesL11 to L15 in order from the object side to the image side, the secondlens group G2 consists of an aperture stop St and five lenses such aslenses L21 to L25 in order from the object side to the image side, thethird lens group G3 consists of five lenses such as lenses L31 to L35 inorder from the object side to the image side, and the fourth lens groupG4 consists of four lenses such as lenses L41 to L44 in order from theobject side to the image side. The focusing lens group Gf is the entirefourth lens group G4.

Table 7 shows basic lens data of the zoom lens according to Example 3,Table 8 shows specifications and variable surface distances, Table 9shows aspherical surface coefficients thereof, and FIG. 15 showsaberration diagrams.

TABLE 7 Example 3 Sn R D Nd vd θgF  1 37.99918 2.050 1.81352 46.650.55465  2 24.14081 5.099 *3 35.59663 2.504 1.99289 23.69 0.62146 *419.04644 4.779 *5 42.92988 2.100 1.85108 40.12 0.56852 *6 17.0857611.798  7 −33.34593 1.120 1.43875 94.66 0.53402  8 30.28942 4.6991.95375 32.32 0.59015  9 −1553.33353 DD[9]   10(St) ∞ 1.314 *11 30.80661 6.239 1.77794 50.21 0.54894 *12  −42.33093 0.100 13 −71.714060.820 1.74073 50.89 0.55099 14 24.54512 2.469 1.49700 81.54 0.53748 15−399.64726 1.121 16 −470.41576 0.790 1.83259 44.74 0.55815 17 17.167173.493 1.68073 31.38 0.59488 18 −84.47041 DD[18] 19 −158.35527 0.8101.84607 43.39 0.56082 20 20.45760 4.379 1.59522 67.73 0.54426 21−34.34684 1.499 22 47.46752 0.880 1.85312 40.61 0.56839 23 18.098065.018 1.43875 94.66 0.53402 24 −45.56510 0.100 25 26.85043 5.802 1.4387594.66 0.53402 26 −22.66757 DD[26] *27  −55.13921 2.165 1.85135 40.100.56954 *28  −23.68550 0.100 29 261.49355 0.890 1.88300 40.76 0.56679 3012.58792 5.610 1.49700 81.54 0.53748 31 99.37997 0.850 1.88300 40.760.56679 32 30.07342 DD[32] 33 ∞ 2.850 1.51680 64.20 0.53430 34 ∞ 0.999

TABLE 8 Example 3 W-Infinity T-Infinity W-500 mm T-500 mm Zr 1.000 1.883— — f 9.265 17.451 9.198 17.117 FNo. 2.89 3.08 2.89 3.07 2ω (°) 121.076.8 121.2 77.2 DD[9] 29.998 2.633 29.998 2.633 DD[18] 3.000 2.605 3.0002.605 DD[26] 2.055 5.567 2.195 5.900 DD[32] 14.970 21.200 14.830 20.868

TABLE 9 Example 3 Sn 3 4 5 6 KA   l.0000000E+00   l.0000000E+00  l.0000000E+00   l.0000000E+00 A3   0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00  0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00 A4   1.8653627E−05 −1.1249714E−05  3.6774134E−05   5.4538416E−05 A5   5.4631576E−07   2.6719413E−06−3.8926308E−07   2.4279446E−06 A6 −4.3657788E−08   2.7010546E−07  1.1365741E−06   1.0970747E−06 A7   6.4042895E−09 −4.5270907E−08  1.2306813E−07   6.5575677E−08 A8 −1.6980981E−09   1.5229011E−10−2.9597008E−08 −3.0893979E−08 A9 −1.1629932E−10   4.3579310E−10−2.0002280E−09 −1.7685576E−09 A10   1.8465428E−11 −5.7910082E−11  3.1290814E−10   3.6785292E−10 A11   7.6190855E−13 −2.4789705E−12  1.7767508E−11   1.3104759E−11 A12 −8.6113503E−14   6.3341097E−13−2.0558369E−12 −2.8242882E−12 A13 −2.6321701E−15   8.4672178E−15−9.0257914E−14   3.4455869E−14 A14   2.1838804E−16 −2.8362378E−15  8.8187018E−15   1.2002433E−14 A15   5.0664220E−18 −1.6347103E−17  2.5331244E−16 −1.0257913E−15 A16 −3.1186625E−19   5.2804074E−18−2.3226910E−17 −3.8788912E−18 A17 −5.1403336E−21   1.4460835E−20−3.5949537E−19   5.1891087E−18 A18   2.3427439E−22 −1.2301601E−21  3.3201571E−20 −1.5551891E−19 A19   2.1453680E−24 −2.1312597E−24  1.9814768E−22 −8.4230290E−21 A20 −7.1222569E−26 −5.1665384E−24−1.9382541E−23   3.7039395E−22 Sn 11 12 27 28 KA   l.0000000E+00  l.0000000E+00   l.0000000E+00   l.0000000E+00 A3   0.0000000E+00  0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00 A4   1.2347920E−05  8.1546419E−06 −8.2942493E−05   2.1750019E−05 A5 −8.8716527E−06  1.5376740E−05   4.3001829E−05 −2.1594780E−05 A6   1.5967426E−06−2.7311680E−06 −2.6894541E−05   6.4033127E−06 A7   2.9623001E−07−1.2522831E−06   1.0254390E−05   6.2601402E−07 A8 −4.7555152E−08  5.5735626E−07 −1.8342978E−06 −4.5779192E−07 A9 −3.2382724E−08−6.2854035E−09 −2.1012585E−08   1.0366821E−08 A10   3.4554272E−09−3.2039148E−08   6.1952713E−08   1.4493944E−08 A11   1.9451415E−09  4.3094838E−09 −7.4166387E−09 −9.0472639E−10 A12 −2.6402955E−10  7.2546476E−10 −3.6147037E−10 −2.5315989E−10 A13 −5.1438216E−11−1.8677460E−10   1.3335709E−10   2.0689556E−11 A14   8.7946270E−12−4.1184787E−12 −6.0801859E−12   2.5426916E−12 A15   6.2022429E−13  3.7896816E−12 −6.6634932E−13 −2.3269348E−13 A16 −1.3800331E−13−1.3499925E−13   7.8955818E−14 −1.4053020E−14 A17 −2.8974041E−15−3.6109174E−14 −1.6593657E−15   1.3190157E−15 A18   1.0122026E−15  2.3256214E−15 −1.9197625E−16   3.6194488E−17 A19   8.6045771E−19  1.3934838E−16   1.6095999E−17 −3.0132977E−18 A20 −2.7124865E−18−1.1500892E−17 −4.3047273E−19 −2.3000887E−20

EXAMPLE 4

FIG. 5 shows cross sections and schematic movement loci of a zoom lensaccording to Example 4. The zoom lens according to Example 4 has thesame configuration as the outline of the zoom lens according toExample 1. Table 10 shows basic lens data of the zoom lens according toExample 4, Table 11 shows specifications and variable surface distances,Table 12 shows aspherical surface coefficients thereof, and FIG. 16shows aberration diagrams.

TABLE 10 Example 4 Sn R D Nd vd θgF  1 42.67431 2.050 1.85150 40.780.56958  2 24.17403 7.218 *3 186.38308 2.504 1.69350 53.18 0.54831 *418.76100 6.342 *5 27.10033 2.100 1.85108 40.12 0.56852 *6 17.33532 8.887 7 −37.31014 1.161 1.43875 94.66 0.53402  8 26.93188 4.990 1.95375 32.320.59015  9 294.00006 DD[9]   10(St) ∞ 1.300 *11  25.98740 5.209 1.6935053.18 0.54831 *12  −37.87609 0.161 13 −71.74406 0.820 1.73354 50.920.55158 14 23.13730 2.423 1.59522 67.73 0.54426 15 272.15551 1.696 16−438.10014 0.790 1.83954 44.05 0.55951 17 17.80689 3.333 1.64769 33.790.59393 18 −95.82496 DD[18] 19 −160.67334 0.810 1.84584 43.42 0.56078 2020.65061 4.297 1.59522 67.73 0.54426 21 −36.01869 2.187 22 42.311980.880 1.83517 44.22 0.55940 23 17.93272 4.972 1.43875 94.66 0.53402 24−51.39177 0.181 25 26.04523 5.716 1.43875 94.66 0.53402 26 −24.11193DD[26] *27  −62.75366 2.250 1.85135 40.10 0.56954 *28  −23.11976 0.16929 160.90135 0.899 1.88300 40.76 0.56679 30 12.14725 5.630 1.49700 81.540.53748 31 −650.23820 0.850 1.88300 40.76 0.56679 32 24.56773 DD[32] 33186.91532 2.241 1.95906 17.47 0.65993 34 −106.63809 8.957 35 ∞ 2.8501.51680 64.20 0.53430 36 ∞ 1.001

TABLE 11 Example 4 W-Infinity T-Infinity W-500 mm T-500 mm Zr 1.0001.883 — — f 8.236 15.513 8.192 15.310 FNo. 2.89 2.88 2.83 2.84 2ω (°)125.8 82.2 126.0 82.6 DD[9] 29.677 3.146 29.677 3.146 DD[18] 3.300 2.5973.300 2.597 DD[26] 2.292 7.117 2.414 7.420 DD[32] 3.670 9.122 3.5488.819

TABLE 12 Example 4 Sn 3 4 5 6 KA   l.0000000E+00   l.0000000E+00  l.0000000E+00   l.0000000E+00 A3   0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00  0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00 A4   2.1445858E−04   1.8461883E−04−9.9451065E−05 −1.0906043E−04 A5 −1.2985368E−05 −1.0276536E−05−1.8928099E−05 −1.8477134E−05 A6 −1.8231203E−06 −1.7101198E−06  3.623474IE−06   5.1614028E−06 A7   2.0074909E−07 −4.0339021E−08  2.9745042E−07   1.4877817E−07 A8   5.3954269E−09   2.4237593E−08−7.3434536E−08 −1.1587250E−07 A9 −1.4924077E−09   2.1920222E−09−2.8111215E−09   3.8059684E−09 A10   2.2509337E−11 −4.4007090E−10  8.7573188E−10   1.3795096E−09 A11   6.4380756E−12 −2.2330857E−11  1.8483791E−11 −1.1020155E−10 A12 −2.4169095E−13   4.8045007E−12−6.5447584E−12 −7.7291138E−12 A13 −1.6909836E−14   1.1579301E−13−7.9024448E−14   1.2515626E−12 A14   8.7441380E−16 −2.9447988E−14  3.0505737E−14   1.4431896E−16 A15   2.6729528E−17 −3.4578372E−16  1.9651707E−16 −7.4977127E−15 A16 −1.6506986E−18   1.0169269E−16−8.5263067E−17   2.3649071E−16 A17 −2.3394713E−20   5.7555226E−19−2.4621714E−19   2.3175488E−17 A18   1.6313682E−21 −1.8580166E−19  1.3009301E−19 −1.1434451E−18 A19   8.7255160E−24 −4.2121116E−22  1.1262502E−22 −2.8962941E−20 A20 −6.6986610E−25   1.4019617E−22−8.3130498E−23   1.7554360E−21 Sn 11 12 27 28 KA   l.0000000E+00  l.0000000E+00   l.0000000E+00   l.0000000E+00 A3   0.0000000E+00  0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00 A4   1.3870308E−05  3.4408218E−05 −4.9852148E−05   7.0704335E−05 A5 −6.1377377E−06−9.2976724E−07   3.6346981E−05 −2.8667850E−05 A6   1.6839811E−06  2.1508636E−06 −2.9076299E−05   3.1860450E−06 A7 −1.1998101E−07−9.7173789E−07   1.0451078E−05   1.1265996E−06 A8 −2.7600084E−08  1.6408518E−07 −1.7136700E−06 −3.2201902E−07 A9   5.7943768E−09  3.2018083E−08 −2.4313123E−08 −9.6344043E−09 A10 −1.9503453E−10−1.8323815E−08   5.7437014E−08   1.0755792E−08 A11   2.6957849E−10  1.5646972E−09 −7.4019612E−09 −4.2522302E−10 A12 −6.8858616E−11  5.3622644E−10 −2.5485055E−10 −1.8665796E−10 A13 −1.0464501E−11−1.0243464E−10   1.3381511E−10   1.3641831E−11 A14   3.7334450E−12−5.6492979E−12 −7.6502144E−12   1.7883771E−12 A15   5.2379685E−14  2.4053660E−12 −6.7509620E−13 −1.7058365E−13 A16 −6.9105098E−14−4.8592127E−14   9.2941619E−14 −8.8014053E−15 A17   1.2502318E−15−2.4268411E−14 −1.5973514E−15   1.0183495E−15 A18   5.5457564E−16  1.2608473E−15 −2.6086785E−16   1.5800993E−17 A19 −1.1465453E−17  9.7877074E−17   1.5932396E−17 −2.3995132E−18 A20 −1.6242722E−18−6.9875921E−18 −2.8644656E−19   1.0828343E−20

EXAMPLE 5

FIG. 6 shows cross sections and schematic movement loci of a zoom lensaccording to Example 5. The zoom lens according to Example 5 has thesame configuration as the outline of the zoom lens according toExample 1. Table 13 shows basic lens data of the zoom lens according toExample 5, Table 14 shows specifications and variable surface distances,Table 15 shows aspherical surface coefficients thereof, and FIG. 17shows aberration diagrams.

TABLE 13 Example 5 Sn R D Nd vd θgF  1 38.95404 2.050 1.59964 61.170.54207  2 24.29601 6.461  3 36.16852 2.504 1.95986 29.28 0.60068  419.41637 4.501 *5 55.83133 2.100 1.85108 40.12 0.56852 *6 17.0789511.507  7 −36.94534 1.410 1.43875 94.66 0.53402  8 28.85934 5.4961.95375 32.32 0.59015  9 7631.46066 DD[9]   10(St) ∞ 1.400 *11  30.786017.000 1.78831 49.17 0.55050 *12  −42.25353 0.100 13 −72.06911 0.8201.73493 43.37 0.56861 14 25.11815 3.000 1.49700 81.54 0.53748 15−462.01491 1.248 16 −446.27718 0.810 1.83102 44.90 0.55785 17 17.219514.402 1.68037 31.40 0.59482 18 −88.23306 DD[18] 19 −154.73880 0.8101.84875 43.13 0.56138 20 20.58594 4.370 1.59522 67.73 0.54426 21−34.11180 1.500 22 48.07929 0.880 1.85369 42.63 0.56241 23 18.186234.989 1.43875 94.66 0.53402 24 −46.01267 0.218 25 26.55479 5.798 1.4387594.66 0.53402 26 −22.98546 DD[26] *27  −55.09969 2.222 1.85135 40.100.56954 *28  −23.71329 0.178 29 325.34179 0.890 1.88300 40.76 0.56679 3012.39644 5.769 1.49700 81.54 0.53748 31 −124.40641 0.850 1.88300 40.760.56679 32 27.25871 DD[32] 33 258.79796 2.209 1.95906 17.47 0.65993 34−100.37566 8.821 35 ∞ 2.850 1.51680 64.20 0.53430 36 ∞ 1.000

TABLE 14 Example 5 W-Infinity T-Infinity W-500 mm T-500 mm Zr 1.0001.883 — — f 9.267 17.454 9.201 17.171 FNo. 2.89 3.03 2.89 3.02 2ω (°)121.0 76.8 121.4 77.2 DD[9] 30.402 2.885 30.402 2.885 DD[18] 3.000 2.3663.000 2.366 DD[26] 2.474 6.282 2.603 6.581 DD[32] 3.408 9.972 3.2799.673

TABLE 15 Example 5 Sn 5 6 11 12 KA   l.0000000E+00   l.0000000E+00  l.0000000E+00   l.0000000E+00 A3   0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00  0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00 A4   2.0772371E−04   2.1632508E−04  1.3826615E−05   1.5775499E−05 A5 −4.1471929E−06 −9.8785219E−07−6.9889974E−06   1.3419060E−05 A6 −3.1143594E−06 −3.7514022E−06  1.9974955E−06 −2.7890153E−06 A7   1.7787261E−07   8.3797182E−08−8.6684708E−08 −1.0340126E−06 A8   2.8665480E−08   4.6521246E−08−4.6580772E−08   5.4165665E−07 A9 −2.4917792E−09 −1.2711851E−09  2.3780837E−09 −1.5194860E−08 A10 −1.6995693E−10 −3.9769932E−10  3.5898884E−10 −3.1479767E−08 A11   2.0579761E−11   1.8314111E−12  4.2716089E−10   4.5115844E−09 A12   5.0157450E−13   2.4650398E−12−6.4331176E−11   7.3514117E−10 A13 −1.0065191E−13   1.4088074E−13−1.5217439E−11 −1.8892909E−10 A14 −2.3232230E−17 −1.5818956E−14  2.9853151E−12 −5.1732299E−12 A15   2.7747474E−16 −1.5650129E−15  1.3900173E−13   3.7904676E−12 A16 −3.6766558E−18   1.0398961E−16−4.8689669E−14 −1.0793788E−13 A17 −3.9172344E−19   6.6253374E−18  4.1371128E−16 −3.5932906E−14 A18   7.9372975E−21 −4.1542718E−19  3.0715607E−16   2.0185135E−15 A19   2.1699753E−22 −1.0008167E−20−8.1902841E−18   1.3831668E−16 A20 −4.8577618E−24   6.4757165E−22−4.6179543E−19 −1.0164821E−17 Sn 27 28 KA   l.0000000E+00  l.0000000E+00 A3   0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00 A4 −6.1140987E−05  3.2909579E−05 A5   3.5907112E−05 −2.4137581E−05 A6 −2.8614464E−05  5.0471046E−06 A7   1.0698290E−05   7.1457390E−07 A8 −1.7422518E−06−3.6422952E−07 A9 −3.7463861E−08   8.3383377E−09 A10   5.8692232E−08  1.0747926E−08 A11 −7.0438545E−09 −8.7608398E−10 A12 −2.8756471E−10−1.6344056E−10 A13   1.2813248E−10   2.0455516E−11 A14 −7.1396755E−12  1.2309547E−12 A15 −6.2217890E−13 −2.3174784E−13 A16   8.8240113E−14−2.5667183E−15 A17 −1.8657032E−15   1.3182165E−15 A18 −2.3729374E−16−1.9140597E−17 A19   1.6504872E−17 −3.0171406E−18 A20 −3.3620442E−19  8.9735427E−20

EXAMPLE 6

FIG. 7 shows cross sections and schematic movement loci of a zoom lensaccording to Example 6. The zoom lens according to Example 6 has thesame configuration as the outline of the zoom lens according toExample 1. Table 16 shows basic lens data of the zoom lens according toExample 6, Table 17 shows specifications and variable surface distances,Table 18 shows aspherical surface coefficients thereof, and FIG. 18shows aberration diagrams.

TABLE 16 Example 6 Sn R D Nd vd θgF  1 44.04000 2.050 1.85150 40.780.56958  2 24.24864 6.981 *3 154.83912 2.504 1.69350 53.18 0.54831 *420.19733 6.438 *5 29.09945 2.100 1.85108 40.12 0.56852 *6 17.13338 8.955 7 −37.39517 1.120 1.43875 94.66 0.53402  8 28.39216 5.078 1.95375 32.320.59015  9 474.79304 DD[9]   10(St) ∞ 1.300 *11  31.62408 7.000 1.8099840.95 0.56644 *12  −45.95742 0.409 13 −79.85552 0.820 1.72047 34.710.58350 14 24.37152 2.379 1.49700 81.54 0.53748 15 −549.86003 1.049 16−574.16402 0.790 1.81600 46.62 0.55682 17 16.36729 3.437 1.67270 32.100.59891 18 −107.22047 DD[18] 19 −156.44300 0.810 1.83481 42.72 0.5648620 21.67065 4.205 1.59522 67.73 0.54426 21 −36.75822 2.097 22 45.853010.880 1.83481 42.72 0.56486 23 18.47924 4.871 1.43875 94.66 0.53402 24−55.78370 0.101 25 28.05382 5.706 1.43875 94.66 0.53402 26 −22.93917DD[26] *27  −57.58300 2.623 1.85135 40.10 0.56954 *28  −23.68806 0.10029 160.08829 0.890 1.88300 40.76 0.56679 30 12.00014 6.016 1.49700 81.540.53748 31 −158.21498 0.850 1.88300 40.76 0.56679 32 29.96082 DD[32] 33141.85857 2.380 1.95906 17.47 0.65993 34 −111.48733 9.154 35 ∞ 2.8501.51680 64.20 0.53430 36 ∞ 1.000

TABLE 17 Example 6 W-Infinity T-Infinity W-500 mm T-500 mm Zr 1.0001.883 — — f 8.238 15.516 8.196 15.326 FNo. 2.88 2.88 2.88 2.87 2ω (°)127.0 82.8 127.2 83.2 DD[9] 29.648 2.884 29.648 2.884 DD[18] 3.490 2.8333.490 2.833 DD[26] 2.000 7.132 2.127 7.452 DD[32] 3.432 8.874 3.3058.555

TABLE 18 Example 6 Sn 3 4 5 6 KA   l.0000000E+00   l.0000000E+00  l.0000000E+00   l.0000000E+00 A3   0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00  0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00 A4   2.1423762E−04   2.1440967E−04−4.4333454E−05 −4.2166156E−05 A5 −1.2860612E−05 −1.4833935E−05−6.7407497E−06 −1.4656569E−05 A6 −2.2230835E−06 −1.6725069E−06  5.7894923E−07   3.2751332E−06 A7   2.2005520E−07 −2.6036575E−09  1.2265825E−07 −7.4943007E−09 A8   9.9925805E−09   1.2874461E−08−8.0755244E−09 −7.4707534E−08 A9 −1.7282871E−09   2.7825445E−09−1.2695205E−09   7.6514628E−09 A10 −1.9846229E−12 −2.0831625E−10  1.0802086E−10   8.2849948E−10 A11   7.7561162E−12 −3.4586025E−11  1.0254071E−11 −1.6617348E−10 A12 −1.7228286E−13   2.5251030E−12−1.1173814E−12 −3.0949327E−12 A13 −2.0928965E−14   2.0736951E−13−5.4518550E−14   1.7223681E−12 A14   7.7750415E−16 −1.6062516E−14  6.6420253E−15 −2.5351650E−14 A15   3.3579792E−17 −6.9067559E−16  1.6104324E−16 −9.7966289E−15 A16 −1.6239313E−18   5.3904155E−17−2.1276004E−17   3.2648525E−16 A17 −2.9466587E−20   1.2233749E−18−2.3466829E−19   2.9236360E−17 A18   1.7139629E−21 −9.1154381E−20  3.4456476E−20 −1.3248173E−18 A19   1.0874543E−23 −9.0037505E−22  1.2873223E−22 −3.5650707E−20 A20 −7.3870423E−25   6.1179838E−23−2.2189480E−23   1.9101090E−21 Sn 11 12 27 28 KA   l.0000000E+00  l.0000000E+00   l.0000000E+00   l.0000000E+00 A3   0.0000000E+00  0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00   0.0000000E+00 A4   1.9849890E−05  3.2218499E−05   1.091803 8E−05   1.1989134E−04 A5 −7.6007113E−06−1.1886776E−05 −6.0674016E−06 −3.3785499E−05 A6 −6.9919185E−07  8.9983427E−06 −1.1736718E−06   9.2147691E−07 A7   8.4763986E−07−2.4027339E−06   2.7572327E−07   1.6475087E−06 A8   7.2612963E−08−1.1557586E−07   2.5619232E−08 −2.5134088E−07 A9 −8.4585482E−08  1.7378028E−07 −8.4908382E−09 −3.2029399E−08 A10   5.3796563E−10−1.8299834E−08   1.0637345E−11   9.6163797E−09 A11   4.5791792E−09−4.5748454E−09   1.7020255E−10   1.1581511E−10 A12 −3.0070219E−10  9.1518481E−10 −1.2272838E−11 −1.7967278E−10 A13 −1.2826106E−10  4.4411464E−11 −2.1763795E−12   5.7956884E−12 A14   1.2817630E−11−1.9280095E−11   2.8328002E−13   1.8364760E−12 A15   1.9257080E−12  3.7346071E−13   1.7104935E−14 −1.0312909E−13 A16 −2.3826486E−13  1.7938670E−13 −3.1210304E−15 −9.8248294E−15 A17 −1.4911582E−14−9.1401909E−15 −7.5201681E−17   7.0088430E−16 A18   2.1374327E−15−6.4700736E−16   1.7567024E−17   2.1530224E−17 A19   4.7350473E−17  5.1025190E−17   1.4141081E−19 −1.7689095E−18 A20 −7.6372357E−18−5.4238076E−19 −4.0498652E−20   2.2781682E−22

EXAMPLE 7

FIG. 8 shows cross sections and schematic movement loci of a zoom lensaccording to Example 7. The zoom lens according to Example 7 consists ofa first lens group G1 having a negative refractive power, a second lensgroup G2 having a positive refractive power, a third lens group G3having a positive refractive power, a fourth lens group G4 having apositive refractive power, a fifth lens group G5 having a negativerefractive power, and a sixth lens group G6 having a positive refractivepower in order from the object side to the image side. During zoomingfrom the wide-angle end to the telephoto end, the first lens group G1moves to the image side, the second lens group G2, the third lens groupG3, the fourth lens group G4, and the fifth lens group G5 move to theobject side, and the sixth lens group G6 is fixed on to the image planeSim. Thus, all the distances between the adjacent lens groups change.The first lens group G1 consists of five lenses such as lenses L11 toL15 in order from the object side to the image side, the second lensgroup G2 consists of an aperture stop St and five lenses such as lensesL21 to L25 in order from the object side to the image side, the thirdlens group G3 consists of two lenses such as lenses L31 and L32 in orderfrom the object side to the image side, the fourth lens group G4consists of three lenses such as lenses L41 to L43 in order from theobject side to the image side, the fifth lens group G5 consists of fourlenses such as lenses L51 to L54 in order from the object side to theimage side, and the sixth lens group G6 consists of one lens such as alens L61. The focusing lens group Gf is the entire fifth lens group G5.The outline of the zoom lens according to Example 7 has been describedabove.

Table 19 shows basic lens data of the zoom lens according to Example 7,Table 20 shows specifications and variable surface distances, Table 21shows aspherical surface coefficients thereof, and FIG. 19 showsaberration diagrams.

TABLE 19 Example 7 Sn R D Nd vd θgF  1 41.41349 2.050 1.85150 40.780.56958  2 23.68980 7.769 *3 199.98788 2.504 1.69350 53.18 0.54831 *418.73877 6.380 *5 28.19466 2.100 1.85108 40.12 0.56852 *6 17.30816 8.877 7 −40.03562 1.120 1.43875 94.66 0.53402  8 27.48902 4.908 1.95375 32.320.59015  9 786.83703 DD[9]   10(St) ∞ 1.300 *11  26.32190 4.783 1.6935053.18 0.54831 *12  −38.38722 0.349 13 −67.29617 0.820 1.73623 52.870.54689 14 24.12365 2.232 1.59522 67.73 0.54426 15 206.47051 0.400 16−317.40797 0.790 1.83256 44.74 0.55814 17 17.26597 3.377 1.64769 33.790.59393 18 −92.86424 DD[18] 19 −168.26505 0.810 1.83838 42.57 0.56382 2020.78142 4.333 1.59522 67.73 0.54426 21 −34.61154 DD[21] 22 42.213950.880 1.82973 43.48 0.56192 23 18.02672 5.040 1.43875 94.66 0.53402 24−48.65002 0.154 25 26.16490 5.758 1.43875 94.66 0.53402 26 −24.22834DD[26] *27  −61.27599 2.306 1.85135 40.10 0.56954 *28  −23.15576 0.15429 139.18827 0.895 1.88300 40.76 0.56679 30 12.43898 5.652 1.49700 81.540.53748 31 −594.76701 0.850 1.88300 40.76 0.56679 32 25.22333 DD[32] 33295.93334 2.145 1.95906 17.47 0.65993 34 −107.09171 8.947 35 ∞ 2.8501.51680 64.20 0.53430 36 ∞ 0.999

TABLE 20 Example 7 W-Infinity T-Infinity W-500 mm T-500 mm Zr 1.0001.883 — — f 8.236 15.513 8.191 15.326 FNo. 2.89 2.88 2.71 2.86 2ω (°)125.8 83.0 126.0 83.4 DD[9] 27.461 2.812 27.461 2.812 DD[18] 3.629 2.8663.629 2.866 DD[21] 1.800 1.907 1.800 1.907 DD[26] 2.304 5.348 2.4325.632 DD[32] 3.721 11.312 3.593 11.028

TABLE 21 Example 7 Sn 3 4 5 6 KA 1.0000000E+00 1.0000000E+001.0000000E+00 1.0000000E+00 A3 0.0000000E+00 0.0000000E+00 0.0000000E+000.0000000E+00 A4 1.8553228E−04 1.3000184E−04 −1.4792318E−04−1.5306723E−04 A5 −1.1851358E−05 −8.4069821E−06 −1.5544082E−05−1.4372529E−05 A6 −1.2659055E−06 −6.7543398E−07 4.8362473E−066.7974853E−06 A7 1.8761495E−07 −8.0505450E−08 2.4245530E−07−1.1029997E−08 A8 −2.0805031E−10 1.8330809E−08 −8.8361107E−08−1.4038291E−07 A9 −1.3997685E−09 2.7355343E−09 −2.3093577E−097.3217584E−09 A10 5.6155111E−11 −5.0180351E−10 9.7931536E−101.5624812E−09 A11 6.0301820E−12 −2.6844337E−11 1.5816741E−11−1.5622836E−10 A12 −3.6807346E−13 6.0545668E−12 −6.9687921E−12−8.3530659E−12 A13 −1.5795700E−14 1.3868447E−13 −7.0811183E−141.6187204E−12 A14 1.1731402E−15 −3.8440545E−14 3.1516817E−143.7421809E−16 A15 2.4898128E−17 −4.1488753E−16 1.8283073E−16−9.2467812E−15 A16 −2.0814946E−18 1.3530839E−16 −8.6548556E−172.4016862E−16 A17 −2.1736241E−20 6.8958764E−19 −2.3636332E−192.7746103E−17 A18 1.9771119E−21 −2.5075486E−19 1.3073685E−19−1.1489803E−18 A19 8.0896630E−24 −5.0042124E−22 1.1194514E−22−3.4007141E−20 A20 −7.8808961E−25 1.9150718E−22 −8.3081387E−231.7533308E−21 Sn 11 12 27 28 KA 1.0000000E+00 1.0000000E+001.0000000E+00 1.0000000E+00 A3 0.0000000E+00 0.0000000E+00 0.0000000E+000.0000000E+00 A4 1.2953078E−05 3.8187078E−05 −5.3074031E−056.4427925E−05 A5 −1.1431193E−05 −3.9115044E−06 3.8936446E−05−2.5777359E−05 A6 3.4816488E−06 2.0305904E−06 −2.8717510E−053.6642664E−06 A7 3.0023422E−07 −6.5395269E−07 1.0298252E−059.4260637E−07 A8 −2.4371425E−07 1.4178091E−07 −1.7426583E−06−3.5149342E−07 A9 −5.4670342E−09 1.4350928E−08 −1.8365173E−08−3.2612970E−09 A10 1.1260902E−08 −1.6124062E−08 5.8733961E−081.2010914E−08 A11 2.2763050E−10 2.1475395E−09 −7.5510424E−09−5.5705836E−10 A12 −4.0397419E−10 4.4367988E−10 −2.8707194E−10−2.1914572E−10 A13 −2.2081897E−12 −1.1405504E−10 1.3616276E−101.5330299E−11 A14 9.5557490E−12 −3.5033932E−12 −7.1855743E−122.2915109E−12 A15 −1.2027268E−13 2.5423780E−12 −6.9735936E−13−1.8377007E−13 A16 −1.2940446E−13 −7.6845163E−14 8.9041920E−14−1.3387991E−14 A17 2.7726178E−15 −2.5146835E−14 −1.4816220E−151.0759703E−15 A18 9.0086136E−16 1.4584662E−15 −2.4309853E−163.8600887E−17 A19 −1.6533706E−17 1.0023624E−16 1.5679569E−17−2.5074494E−18 A20 −2.4778335E−18 −7.5577201E−18 −3.2059225E−19−3.7003863E−20

EXAMPLE 8

FIG. 9 shows cross sections and schematic movement loci of a zoom lensaccording to Example 8. The zoom lens of Example 8 has the sameconfiguration as the outline of the zoom lens according to Example 7except that a third lens group G3 has a negative refractive power. Table22 shows basic lens data of the zoom lens according to Example 8, Table23 shows specifications and variable surface distances, Table 24 showsaspherical surface coefficients thereof, and FIG. 20 shows aberrationdiagrams.

TABLE 22 Example 8 Sn R D Nd vd θgF  1 41.28848 2.050 1.85150 40.780.56958  2 23.79980 7.687 *3 180.00350 2.504 1.69350 53.18 0.54831 *418.77514 6.430 *5 28.05765 2.100 1.85108 40.12 0.56852 *6 17.24984 8.964 7 −37.41452 1.120 1.43875 94.66 0.53402  8 27.57374 4.978 1.95375 32.320.59015  9 717.69516 DD[9]   10(St) ∞ 1.300 *11  25.89581 5.160 1.6935053.18 0.54831 *12  −37.94826 0.245 13 −69.40994 0.820 1.73135 51.510.55044 14 25.15690 2.208 1.59522 67.73 0.54426 15 235.28308 0.400 16−373.54363 0.807 1.82926 45.07 0.55751 17 17.53423 4.254 1.64769 33.790.59393 18 −88.29190 DD[18] 19 −100.00000 0.810 1.83438 41.71 0.56655 2020.78142 4.317 1.59522 67.73 0.54426 21 −36.00000 DD[21] 22 42.275300.958 1.83348 44.64 0.55836 23 18.00679 5.050 1.43875 94.66 0.53402 24−47.63396 0.153 25 26.18926 5.898 1.43875 94.66 0.53402 26 −24.44917DD[26] *27  −61.27006 2.391 1.85135 40.10 0.56954 *28  −23.18567 0.15029 139.58321 0.904 1.88300 40.76 0.56679 30 12.31147 5.630 1.49700 81.540.53748 31 −712.05790 0.850 1.88300 40.76 0.56679 32 25.13792 DD[32] 33235.51432 2.299 1.95906 17.47 0.65993 34 −94.05982 8.956 35 ∞ 2.8501.51680 64.20 0.53430 36 ∞ 1.000

TABLE 23 Example 8 W-Infinity T-Infinity W-500 mm T-500 mm Zr 1.0001.883 — — f 8.237 15.515 8.193 15.326 FNo. 2.88 2.88 2.88 2.87 2ω (°)125.8 82.4 126.0 82.8 DD[9] 28.542 2.827 28.542 2.827 DD[18] 3.443 3.0293.443 3.029 DD[21] 1.800 1.572 1.800 1.572 DD[26] 2.516 6.639 2.6466.946 DD[32] 3.698 10.127 3.568 9.820

TABLE 24 Example 8 Sn 3 4 5 6 KA 1.0000000E+00 1.0000000E+001.0000000E+00  1.0000000E+00 A3 0.0000000E+00 0.0000000E+000.0000000E+00  0.0000000E+00 A4 1.7817121E−04 1.2444958E−04−1.5587216E−04 −1.6218411E−04 A5 −1.1802753E−05 −8.9427786E−06−1.6729001E−05 −1.5553424E−05 A6 −1.1501893E−06 −6.1712191E−074.9713132E−06  6.9411257E−06 A7 1.8547406E−07 −6.5020599E−082.6695675E−07  9.1785685E−09 A8 −1.1206100E−09 1.8976916E−08−8.9674357E−08 −1.4072804E−07 A9 −1.3787239E−09 2.5137525E−09−2.5904793E−09  7.0965568E−09 A10 5.9938885E−11 −5.1833720E−109.8728804E−10  1.5282655E−09 A11 5.9228813E−12 −2.4987063E−111.7759970E−11 −1.5463453E−10 A12 −3.7586298E−13 6.1853726E−12−7.0000889E−12 −7.6510182E−12 A13 −1.5476728E−14 1.2913358E−13−7.9095186E−14  1.6117876E−12 A14 1.1765419E−15 −3.8945337E−143.1594679E−14 −6.3305179E−15 A15 2.4343431E−17 −3.8518743E−162.0414552E−16 −9.2294545E−15 A16 −2.0644460E−18 1.3624220E−16−8.6659745E−17  2.7514649E−16 A17 −2.1213337E−20 6.3836977E−19−2.6670701E−19  2.7725498E−17 A18 1.9449063E−21 −2.5128020E−191.3080572E−19 −1.2447243E−18 A19 7.8832520E−24 −4.6287962E−221.3029291E−22 −3.4001309E−20 A20 −7.7021012E−25 1.9115709E−22−8.3081387E−23  1.8610909E−21 Sn 11 12 27 28 KA 1.0000000E+001.0000000E+00 1.0000000E+00  1.0000000E+00 A3 0.0000000E+000.0000000E+00 0.0000000E+00  0.0000000E+00 A4 1.4210051E−054.3913590E−05 −5.5075379E−05  6.2703642E−05 A5 −8.3583091E−06−6.2397130E−06 3.6892406E−05 −2.7867151E−05 A6 2.6445290E−062.0885726E−06 −2.8501178E−05  3.9373888E−06 A7 2.3587006E−08−4.6298237E−07 1.0455105E−05  1.0595667E−06 A8 −1.4699944E−071.4356892E−07 −1.7515840E−06 −3.5913547E−07 A9 8.3253169E−092.4151710E−09 −2.5022612E−08 −7.3773982E−09 A10 5.8951528E−09−1.6370228E−08 5.8893509E−08  1.1939750E−08 A11 −1.8396741E−102.6052287E−09 −7.3858674E−09 −4.6433025E−10 A12 −2.3322022E−104.5039701E−10 −2.8754647E−10 −2.1130212E−10 A13 5.3055800E−12−1.2441622E−10 1.3371201E−10  1.4016372E−11 A14 6.2855015E−12−3.5736137E−12 −7.2125746E−12  2.1167422E−12 A15 −2.0253567E−132.6773523E−12 −6.7596338E−13 −1.7252059E−13 A16 −9.2258767E−14−7.6802008E−14 8.9481906E−14 −1.1503559E−14 A17 3.2688325E−15−2.6082185E−14 −1.5829260E−15  1.0229135E−15 A18 6.7081531E−161.4629201E−15 −2.4587246E−16  2.8365930E−17 A19 −1.7801597E−171.0290669E−16 1.5880101E−17 −2.4016237E−18 A20 −1.8802842E−18−7.5818878E−18 −3.1409511E−19 −1.4533514E−20

EXAMPLE 9

FIG. 10 shows cross sections and schematic movement loci of a zoom lensaccording to Example 9. The zoom lens according to Example 9 consists ofa first lens group G1 having a negative refractive power, a second lensgroup G2 having a positive refractive power, and a third lens group G3having a negative refractive power in order from the object side to theimage side. During zooming from the wide-angle end to the telephoto end,the first lens group G1 moves to the image side and the second lensgroup G2 and the third lens group G3 move to the object side. Thus, allthe distances between the adjacent lens groups change. The first lensgroup G1 consists of five lenses such as lenses L11 to L15 in order fromthe object side to the image side, the second lens group G2 consists ofan aperture stop St and ten lenses such as lenses L21 to L30 in orderfrom the object side to the image side, and the third lens group G3consists of four lenses such as lenses L31 and L34 in order from theobject side to the image side. The focusing lens group Gf is the entirethird lens group G3.

Table 25 shows basic lens data of the zoom lens according to Example 9,Table 26 shows specifications and variable surface distances, Table 27shows aspherical surface coefficients thereof, and FIG. 21 showsaberration diagrams.

TABLE 25 Example 9 Sn R D Nd vd θgF  1 37.99918 2.050 1.71897 55.550.54271  2 24.17952 5.101 *3 35.85033 2.504 2.00001 23.18 0.62355 *419.06832 4.938 *5 42.99544 2.100 1.85108 40.12 0.56852 *6 16.9754411.741  7 −33.00862 1.120 1.43875 94.66 0.53402  8 30.18923 4.6451.95375 32.32 0.59015  9 6769.26125 DD[9]   10(St) ∞ 1.300 *11  30.669306.569 1.77632 50.37 0.54870 *12  −41.97745 0.100 13 −72.34341 0.8201.74057 49.63 0.55390 14 24.55432 2.480 1.49700 81.54 0.53748 15−340.45558 0.919 16 −492.43359 0.790 1.83328 44.67 0.55828 17 17.465253.460 1.67995 31.43 0.59475 18 −82.20649 3.000 19 −157.76127 0.8101.84642 43.36 0.56090 20 20.32879 4.384 1.59522 67.73 0.54426 21−34.31739 1.499 22 47.63975 0.880 1.85605 42.39 0.56292 23 18.050214.994 1.43875 94.66 0.53402 24 −45.78783 0.398 25 27.10191 5.772 1.4387594.66 0.53402 26 −22.80653 DD[26] *27  −53.93129 2.150 1.85135 40.100.56954 *28  −23.82934 0.100 29 278.71803 0.890 1.88300 40.76 0.56679 3012.71252 5.610 1.49700 81.54 0.53748 31 84.11043 0.850 1.88300 40.760.56679 32 30.46524 DD[32] 33 ∞ 2.850 1.51680 64.20 0.53430 34 ∞ 0.999

TABLE 26 Example 9 W-Infinity T-Infinity W-500 mm T-500 mm Zr 1.0001.883 — — f 9.267 17.454 9.200 17.115 FNo. 2.88 3.05 2.89 3.05 2ω (°)121.0 76.6 121.2 77.2 DD[9] 30.189 2.702 30.189 2.702 DD[26] 2.004 6.0022.147 6.352 DD[32] 14.911 20.579 14.768 20.229

TABLE 27 Example 9 Sn 3 4 5 6 KA 1.0000000E+00 1.0000000E+001.0000000E+00  1.0000000E+00 A3 0.0000000E+00 0.0000000E+000.0000000E+00  0.0000000E+00 A4 4.3579078E−06 −3.7647125E−052.5118056E−06  2.4038898E−05 A5 6.1108418E−07 3.2857428E−06−1.4092283E−06  2.7797585E−06 A6 1.1776328E−07 5.0274397E−071.4526221E−06  1.3007142E−06 A7 1.0115853E−08 −6.6981646E−081.4139088E−07  1.8378201E−08 A8 −2.4062256E−09 1.4858137E−09−3.0260189E−08 −2.6143690E−08 A9 −1.6471722E−10 7.8665955E−10−2.1843838E−09 −4.0100028E−10 A10 1.6766142E−11 −1.0104289E−103.0167062E−10  2.5400355E−10 A11 1.0477521E−12 −5.6742015E−121.8895037E−11 −6.6204539E−12 A12 −5.4951876E−14 9.8123825E−13−1.9514802E−12 −1.7451201E−12 A13 −3.5612552E−15 2.5892073E−14−9.4488704E−14  1.9784564E−13 A14 8.0877467E−17 −4.1347873E−158.4303048E−15  6.5258629E−15 A15 6.7812206E−18 −7.2494749E−172.6281415E−16 −1.8124128E−15 A16 −1.4094079E−20 7.4163194E−18−2.2544121E−17  1.1663618E−17 A17 −6.8304100E−21 1.1284937E−19−3.7122465E−19  7.2364181E−18 A18 −9.1130345E−23 −1.7775910E−213.2758004E−20 −1.7946465E−19 A19 2.8371738E−24 −7.4427328E−232.0425494E−22 −1.0652633E−20 A20 7.2328607E−26 −6.7144633E−24−1.9438197E−23  3.8746057E−22 Sn 11 12 27 28 KA 1.0000000E+001.0000000E+00 1.0000000E+00  1.0000000E+00 A3 0.0000000E+000.0000000E+00 0.0000000E+00  0.0000000E+00 A4 7.6946070E−06−1.2927788E−06 −8.1522204E−05  2.2257820E−05 A5 −9.0052179E−061.8404413E−05 4.4785414E−05 −2.0695347E−05 A6 1.9598414E−06−2.9902905E−06 −2.7303849E−05  6.3009873E−06 A7 2.2991459E−07−1.5386880E−06 1.0161013E−05  5.6988808E−07 A8 −7.3086519E−086.1195410E−07 −1.8123594E−06 −4.5670856E−07 A9 −2.6441714E−088.5266581E−09 −1.7874046E−08  1.2437554E−08 A10 4.4460171E−09−3.5989259E−08 6.1361268E−08  1.4661368E−08 A11 1.6807750E−093.8337577E−09 −7.4833603E−09 −9.5145924E−10 A12 −2.8826307E−108.8503967E−10 −3.5265530E−10 −2.6110524E−10 A13 −4.4750000E−11−1.7729499E−10 1.3425097E−10  2.1342391E−11 A14 9.1887318E−12−8.0299735E−12 −6.1448677E−12  2.7085617E−12 A15 5.2209189E−133.6758768E−12 −6.7366121E−13 −2.3820354E−13 A16 −1.4238812E−13−7.7251489E−14 7.9031516E−14 −1.5904921E−14 A17 −2.1183120E−15−3.5360385E−14 −1.6260453E−15  1.3447522E−15 A18 1.0437771E−151.8530613E−15 −1.9023049E−16  4.6900274E−17 A19 −1.7320943E−181.3729732E−16 1.6031226E−17 −3.0643517E−18 A20 −2.8234116E−18−9.8547997E−18 −4.3787098E−19 −4.8156187E−20

EXAMPLE 10

FIG. 11 shows cross sections and schematic movement loci of a zoom lensaccording to Example 10. The zoom lens according to Example 10 has thesame configuration as the outline of the zoom lens according to Example1 except that a second lens group G2 consists of an aperture stop St andthree lenses such as lenses L21 to L23 in order from the object side tothe image side. Table 28 shows basic lens data of the zoom lensaccording to Example 10, Table 29 shows specifications and variablesurface distances, Table 30 shows aspherical surface coefficientsthereof, and FIG. 22 shows aberration diagrams.

TABLE 28 Example 10 Sn R D Nd vd θgF  1 38.83843 2.050 2.00100 29.130.59952  2 24.81705 5.377 *3 178.21729 2.504 1.61881 63.85 0.54182 *420.19309 5.936 *5 27.60432 2.100 1.85135 40.10 0.56954 *6 17.98825 9.721 7 −37.48868 1.155 1.48749 70.44 0.53062  8 22.37597 5.287 1.98423 28.810.60204  9 85.39061 DD[9]   10(St) ∞ 1.300 *11  31.29381 5.414 1.4971081.56 0.53848 *12  −32.44803 0.700 13 −478.66283 0.710 1.82761 45.240.55720 14 22.66145 2.928 1.72717 28.77 0.60157 15 291.93512 DD[15] 16−176.40583 0.810 1.84317 43.68 0.56023 17 21.84639 4.444 1.59522 67.730.54426 18 −31.58888 2.000 19 33.09781 0.710 1.87525 40.48 0.56722 2016.90117 6.030 1.43875 94.66 0.53402 21 −90.33111 0.672 22 26.617895.480 1.49710 81.56 0.53848 23 −28.19034 DD[23] *24  −65.30460 2.2541.80139 45.45 0.55814 *25  −20.94046 0.100 26 −116.23532 0.915 1.8830040.76 0.56679 27 12.01637 4.943 1.48749 70.44 0.53062 28 42.59105 0.8902.00100 29.13 0.59952 29 25.03413 DD[29] 30 266.58306 2.476 2.0027219.32 0.64514 31 −79.08354 8.637 32 ∞ 2.850 1.51680 64.20 0.53430 33 ∞0.999

TABLE 29 Example 10 W-Infinity T-Infinity W-500 mm T-500 mm Zr 1.0001.885 — — f 8.240 15.533 8.197 15.348 FNo. 4.12 4.12 4.12 4.09 2ω (°)126.6 81.4 126.8 82.0 DD[9] 28.420 3.583 28.420 3.583 DD[15] 7.280 5.9347.280 5.934 DD[23] 2.267 6.676 2.373 6.937 DD[29] 3.387 9.151 3.2818.890

TABLE 30 Example 10 Sn 3 4 5 6 KA 1.0000000E+00 1.0000000E+001.0000000E+00  1.0000000E+00 A3 0.0000000E+00 0.0000000E+000.0000000E+00  0.0000000E+00 A4 1.9988206E−04 2.2009889E−04−2.6325038E−05 −2.5890038E−05 A5 −4.7884304E−06 −1.0663953E−05−5.7523622E−06  1.9710509E−06 A6 −1.8522010E−06 −1.7633881E−061.5282618E−06  3.4973820E−07 A7 9.6926862E−08 2.3494988E−078.3207313E−08 −3.5512780E−08 A8 7.0116788E−09 −3.4605810E−09−3.1985403E−08  8.4350774E−09 A9 −8.1338669E−10 −3.0732589E−09−7.4922729E−10 −1.4286840E−10 A10 6.2196004E−12 1.5039080E−103.6791953E−10 −2.5462979E−10 A11 3.8306313E−12 2.4944170E−114.2829353E−12  9.7842492E−12 A12 −1.5985066E−13 −1.1592000E−12−2.4659380E−12  3.2348980E−12 A13 −1.0751405E−14 −1.2363197E−13−1.5690233E−14 −1.1585534E−13 A14 6.4095225E−16 5.1641000E−159.9352692E−15 −2.3229015E−14 A15 1.7820004E−17 3.6213610E−163.5325188E−17  6.5232270E−16 A16 −1.2614112E−18 −1.5549728E−17−2.3984950E−17  9.7319306E−17 A17 −1.6088054E−20 −5.7615451E−19−4.3808930E−20 −1.8232077E−18 A18 1.2725085E−21 2.8974518E−203.2320249E−20 −2.2629889E−19 A19 6.0996528E−24 3.8383269E−222.2332247E−23  2.0560322E−21 A20 −5.2582305E−25 −2.4030749E−23−1.8866554E−23  2.3213927E−22 Sn 11 12 24 25 KA 1.0000000E+001.0000000E+00 1.0000000E+00  1.0000000E+00 A3 0.0000000E+000.0000000E+00 0.0000000E+00  0.0000000E+00 A4 1.8131929E−052.9461519E−05 9.7916315E−06  1.2671312E−04 A5 −1.1623542E−05−1.2037429E−06 1.2360732E−06 −2.6567039E−05 A6 1.1508714E−063.0985175E−06 −5.5252711E−06 −4.8731882E−07 A7 9.7231567E−07−4.6213219E−07 1.1267236E−06  1.8568389E−06 A8 −1.8473299E−07−2.5190760E−07 2.0764734E−07 −2.0238319E−07 A9 −4.5550852E−087.1919616E−08 −7.7624633E−08 −5.4245866E−08 A10 1.1178587E−086.6202336E−09 −1.6843708E−09  9.5285746E−09 A11 1.4330916E−09−3.9519480E−09 2.3591950E−09  8.3542650E−10 A12 −3.9796202E−107.8278058E−11 −7.5970152E−11 −2.1185700E−10 A13 −2.8191691E−111.1365987E−10 −3.9277257E−11 −6.4079304E−12 A14 8.6365562E−12−8.6181468E−12 2.3487847E−12  2.6838311E−12 A15 3.2889333E−13−1.8044608E−12 3.7105894E−13  1.3189721E−14 A16 −1.1093195E−132.0416055E−13 −2.8582230E−14 −1.9789987E−14 A17 −2.0838167E−151.4964872E−14 −1.8684311E−15  1.1141902E−16 A18 7.7164688E−16−2.1487185E−15 1.6679874E−16  7.9323252E−17 A19 5.5291926E−18−5.0592800E−17 3.8989609E−18 −5.3075735E−19 A20 −2.2362317E−188.7275034E−18 −3.8550221E−19 −1.3413935E−19

EXAMPLE 11

FIG. 12 shows cross sections and schematic movement loci of a zoom lensaccording to Example 11. The zoom lens according to Example 11 has thesame configuration as the outline of the zoom lens according to Example1 except that a second lens group G2 consists of an aperture stop St andthree lenses such as lenses L21 to L23 in order from the object side tothe image side, a third lens group G3 consists of four lenses such aslenses L31 to L34 in order from the object side to the image side, andthe fourth lens group G4 consists of three lenses such as lenses L41 toL43 in order from the object side to the image side. Table 31 showsbasic lens data of the zoom lens according to Example 11, Table 32 showsspecifications and variable surface distances, Tables 33 and 34 showaspherical surface coefficients thereof, and FIG. 23 shows aberrationdiagrams.

TABLE 31 Example 11 Sn R D Nd vd θgF *1 38.01958 2.100 1.85344 33.580.58902 *2 21.67083 6.500 *3 49.75342 2.262 1.78355 49.64 0.54977 *418.81885 7.613  5 42.22009 1.800 1.68191 57.40 0.54263  6 18.9441211.882  7 −29.44155 1.300 1.49700 81.54 0.53748  8 63.89485 0.300  950.54214 4.750 1.91082 35.25 0.58224 10 −70.20454 DD[10]   11(St) ∞1.300 *12  20.93165 3.000 1.49710 81.56 0.53848 *13  58.85146 3.296 14174.57085 0.710 1.81330 24.43 0.61471 15 14.32932 6.000 1.73658 28.170.60317 16 −32.59552 DD[16] 17 96.80123 2.010 1.58335 39.66 0.57725 18−143.06846 0.710 1.77264 49.26 0.55182 19 12.42943 4.000 1.49700 81.540.53748 20 57.90386 1.628 *21  27.68454 6.068 1.49710 81.56 0.53848 *22 −22.01245 DD[22] *23  85.62851 3.008 1.68948 31.02 0.59874 *24 −41.08714 0.100 25 500.70959 1.010 2.00069 25.46 0.61364 26 14.885524.500 1.49700 81.54 0.53748 27 40.04588 DD[27] 28 616.37490 2.2551.81797 32.50 0.59283 29 −114.53368 10.393 30 ∞ 2.850 1.51680 64.200.53430 31 ∞ 1.000

TABLE 32 Example 11 W-Infinity T-Infinity W-500 mm T-500 mm Zr 1.0001.885 — — f 8.242 15.537 8.199 15.391 FNo. 2.88 2.88 2.88 2.87 2ω (°)127.4 85.8 127.6 85.8 DD[10] 29.049 1.905 29.049 1.905 DD[16] 2.0001.977 2.000 1.977 DD[22] 2.090 1.999 2.364 2.521 DD[27] 3.000 15.0962.726 14.574

TABLE 33 Example 11 Sn 1 2 3 4 KA 1.0000000E+00 1.0000000E+001.0000000E+00  1.0000000E+00 A3 0.0000000E+00 0.0000000E+000.0000000E+00  0.0000000E+00 A4 2.3538914E−06 −6.1204523E−061.2112840E−05  1.3975901E−05 A5 −3.4907564E−08 −5.3472016E−08−7.4620073E−09 −1.5061890E−07 A6 −4.4722488E−09 −4.3584587E−096.6324806E−09 −5.1554822E−09 A7 4.3913012E−11 −9.2519054E−11−1.5157417E−10  4.2577001E−10 A8 −2.7550962E−13 2.7468421E−121.0339000E−11  2.8085677E−11 A9 1.1425808E−15 −9.1925037E−141.9791555E−13 −4.8544102E−13 A10 −7.8590812E−16 −1.5338856E−141.1545987E−14 −3.1533737E−14 A11 −4.1648225E−18 8.2566210E−182.9601859E−16 −2.6247435E−16 A12 1.0747580E−18 −2.3837349E−175.2816041E−17 −8.9734797E−16 A13 −5.0833046E−22 1.6661231E−19−5.8674993E−19 −1.1351214E−17 A14 1.4697881E−21 4.8059808E−201.5290329E−20  6.0284294E−19 A15 1.2803528E−24 5.8639768E−22−5.9878088E−22  2.8994109E−21 A16 1.3808693E−24 2.3949824E−22−3.5280410E−23 −3.8481462E−21 A17 −2.5706403E−27 4.6754151E−25−6.8874513E−25 −1.7011615E−23 A18 −1.6908626E−28 3.0085461E−25−8.8996738E−27 −1.6401607E−23 A19 −5.7251870E−30 1.2814567E−273.2557651E−27 −3.1846491E−27 A20 −1.8105323E−30 −1.9856837E−27−3.2952552E−28 −3.3725389E−26 Sn 12 13 21 22 KA 1.0000000E+001.0000000E+00 1.0000000E+00  1.0000000E+00 A3 0.0000000E+000.0000000E+00 0.0000000E+00  0.0000000E+00 A4 1.2438273E−055.7094962E−05 −3.3920976E−05 −2.7234264E−05 A5 3.2438500E−073.6641458E−07 9.1209364E−08 −4.7392270E−08 A6 6.7064519E−081.3547340E−07 −9.1075703E−08 −1.0451403E−07 A7 9.0662184E−09−2.0551815E−08 6.6879648E−10  3.1133983E−10 A8 1.8201054E−099.1324518E−09 4.7101690E−10 −3.3831822E−10 A9 −1.1401647E−10−5.6857535E−10 7.4650881E−12 −2.9938769E−12 A10 −5.2325496E−11−4.6323958E−11 9.3430648E−13  4.7431754E−12 A11 −3.1240698E−122.7073350E−12 −1.2993896E−13 −1.3962563E−13 A12 1.3366222E−12−6.2383808E−13 −8.7353465E−15 −8.3874335E−14 A13 1.9997329E−155.8218492E−15 1.7710798E−15  2.8923215E−15 A14 −4.1895357E−151.6006435E−14 −9.9429173E−16 −1.0284337E−16 A15 3.5085904E−161.5149915E−15 4.2495272E−17  8.8453051E−18 A16 −8.3138080E−17−2.4668233E−16 1.3131198E−18  1.3296931E−18 A17 −3.8192093E−181.4115625E−17 4.2892092E−20 −1.7747536E−19 A18 1.4963264E−18−2.6533787E−18 1.3021721E−20  3.5448239E−21 A19 −2.1099707E−19−1.6589720E−19 2.4739017E−21 −2.7073562E−21 A20 1.4025700E−203.1529794E−20 −2.6700698E−22  2.5008909E−22

TABLE 34 Example 11 Sn 23 24 KA 1.0000000E+00 1.0000000E+00 A30.0000000E+00 0.0000000E+00 A4 2.4655987E−05 5.9031115E−05 A51.0515050E−07 1.8664432E−07 A6 1.0268190E−07 1.7747794E−08 A77.1369499E−11 2.7928601E−10 A8 4.3488916E−13 −4.1694372E−10  A92.7915694E−11 4.9870126E−13 A10 −1.0914253E−12  1.1023631E−12 A11−3.4033712E−14  4.1779752E−14 A12 −4.8664457E−14  3.1863440E−15 A131.7202965E−15 2.9318215E−15 A14 9.6695648E−17 −3.0190039E−16  A15−2.4331206E−19  1.3471653E−17 A16 5.0914166E−18 −4.7314493E−18  A172.6786239E−20 3.4994751E−19 A18 −1.7253807E−19  −1.4489281E−19  A193.8700030E−21 4.4688877E−21 A20 7.9498617E−22 8.4953025E−22

Table 35 shows values corresponding to Conditional Expressions (1) to(12) of the zoom lenses according to Examples 1 to 11. In Examples 1 to11, the d line is set as the reference wavelength. Table 35 shows thevalues with the d line as the reference.

TABLE 35 Expression number Example 1 Example 2 Example 3 Example 4Example 5 Example 6  (1) Nd1ave 1.798 1.798 1.886 1.799 1.803 1.799  (2)|ff/f1| 1.660 1.610 1.881 1.713 1.330 1.685  (3) |(1 − βfw²) × βrw²|1.441 1.496 1.584 1.438 1.725 1.390  (4) Nd1amin 1.693 1.693 1.814 1.6941.600 1.694  (5) vdf 81.54 81.54 81.54 81.54 81.54 81.54  (6) vd1bn94.66 94.66 94.66 94.66 94.66 94.66  (7) Nd1 1.852 1.852 1.814 1.8521.600 1.852  (8) BFw/(fw × tanωw) 0.736 0.735 1.089 0.735 0.714 0.729 (9) tanωw/FNow 0.676 0.677 0.613 0.677 0.613 0.695 (10) (R1 + R2)/(R1 −R2) 3.750 3.800 4.484 3.613 4.315 3.450 (11) |f1/f2| 0.338 0.610 0.3680.328 0.394 0.344 (12) |f1a/f1b| 0.094 0.082 0.065 0.057 0.084 0.059Expression number Example 7 Example 8 Example 9 Example 10 Example 11 (1) Nd1ave 1.799 1.799 1.857 1.847 1.773  (2) |ff/f1| 1.738 1.746 1.9431.593 2.795  (3) |(1 − βfw²) × βrw²| 1.364 1.354 1.554 1.641 0.636  (4)Nd1amin 1.694 1.694 1.719 1.619 1.682  (5) vdf 81.54 81.54 81.54 70.4481.54  (6) vd1bn 94.66 94.66 94.66 70.44 81.54  (7) Nd1 1.852 1.8521.719 2.001 1.835  (8) BFw/(fw × tanωw) 0.735 0.735 1.087 0.703 0.795 (9) tanωw/FNow 0.677 0.677 0.613 0.483 0.702 (10) (R1 + R2)/(R1 − R2)3.673 3.722 4.499 4.540 3.651 (11) |f1/f2| 0.310 0.342 0.670 0.325 0.658(12) |f1a/f1b| 0.085 0.074 0.054 0.030 0.098

As can be seen from the above data, in the zoom lenses according toExamples 1 to 11, the maximum full-angle of view in a state in which theobject at infinity at the wide-angle end is in focus is equal to orgreater than 120 degrees, the wide angle of view is secured, reductionin size is achieved, and various aberrations are satisfactorilycorrected. Accordingly, high optical performance is achieved.

Next, an imaging apparatus according to an embodiment of the presentinvention will be described. FIGS. 24 and 25 are external views of acamera 30 which is the imaging apparatus according to the embodiment ofthe present invention. FIG. 24 is a perspective view in a case where thecamera 30 is viewed from the front side, and FIG. 25 is a perspectiveview in a case where the camera 30 is viewed from the rear side. Thecamera 30 is a mirrorless digital camera to which an interchangeablelens 20 is detachably attached. The interchangeable lens 20 includes thezoom lens 1 according to the embodiment of the present invention whichis accommodated in a lens barrel.

The camera 30 comprises a camera body 31, and a shutter button 32 and apower button 33 are provided on the upper surface of the camera body 31.A manipulation unit 34, a manipulation unit 35, and a display unit 36are provided on the rear surface of the camera body 31. The display unit36 displays a captured image and an image within an angle of view beforethe image is captured.

An imaging opening on which rays from an imaging target are incident isformed in the central portion of the front surface of the camera body31, a mount 37 is provided in a position corresponding to the imagingopening, and the interchangeable lens 20 is attached to the camera body31 through the mount 37.

An imaging element such as a charge coupled device (CCD) or acomplementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) that outputs imagingsignals corresponding to a subject image formed by the interchangeablelens 20, a signal processing circuit that generates an image byprocessing the imaging signals output from the imaging element, and arecording medium for recording the generated image are provided withinthe camera body 31. In the camera 30, it is possible to image a stillimage or a motion picture by pressing the shutter button 32, and imagedata obtained through the imaging is recorded in the recording medium.

The present invention has been hitherto described through embodimentsand examples, but the present invention is not limited to theabove-mentioned embodiments and examples, and may be modified intovarious forms. For example, values such as the radius of curvature, thesurface distance, the refractive index, the Abbe number, and theaspherical surface coefficient of each lens are not limited to thevalues shown in the numerical examples, and different values may be usedtherefor.

The imaging apparatus according to the embodiment of the presentinvention is not limited to the examples. For example, various aspectssuch as cameras other than non-reflex cameras, film cameras, videocameras, movie shooting cameras, and broadcasting cameras may be used.

What is claimed is:
 1. A zoom lens consisting of: in order from anobject side to an image side, a first lens group having a negativerefractive power; a second lens group having a positive refractivepower; a third lens group having a positive refractive power; a fourthlens group having a negative refractive power; and a fifth lens grouphaving a refractive power, wherein mutual distances between the firstlens group, the second lens group, the third lens group, the fourth lensgroup and the fifth lens group change due to movement of at least thefirst lens group, the second lens group, the third lens group and thefourth lens group during zooming, the fourth lens group includes afocusing lens group which moves during focusing from an object atinfinity from an object within a short range, a negative meniscus lensof which a convex surface faces the object side is disposed closest toan object side in the first lens group, a lens of which a convex surfacefaces the image side is disposed closest to an image side in the secondlens group, a lens of which a concave surface faces the object side isdisposed closest to an object side in the fourth lens group, a lens ofwhich a concave surface faces the image side is disposed closest to animage side in the fourth lens group, and assuming that an on-axisair-equivalent distance from a lens surface closest to the image side toan image plane in a state in which the object at infinity at thewide-angle end is in focus is BFw, a focal length of the zoom lens in astate in which the object at infinity at the wide-angle end is in focusis fw, and a maximum half-angle of view in a state in which the objectat infinity at the wide-angle end is in focus is ωw, ConditionalExpression (8-7) is satisfied,0.5<BFw/(fw×tan ωw)<1.3   (8-7).
 2. The zoom lens according to claim 1,only the fourth lens group includes a focusing lens group which movesduring focusing from the object at infinity from the object within ashort range.
 3. The zoom lens according to claim 2, a lens of which aconvex surface faces the image side is disposed closest to an image sidein the third lens group.
 4. The zoom lens according to claim 3, a lenssurface closest to an object side in the second lens group is a convexsurface.
 5. The zoom lens according to claim 4, a positive lens isdisposed closest to an image side in the first lens group.
 6. The zoomlens according to claim 5, a negative lens of which a concave surfacefaces the image side is disposed so as to be adjacent to an object sideof the positive lens closest to the image side in the first lens group.7. The zoom lens according to claim 6, wherein assuming that a focallength of the focusing lens group is ff, and a focal length of the firstlens group is f1, Conditional Expression (2) is satisfied,1<|ff/f1|<3   (2).
 8. The zoom lens according to claim 7, whereinConditional Expression (2-3) is satisfied,1<|ff/f1|<2.3   (2-3).
 9. The zoom lens according to claim 8, whereinassuming that an Abbe number of at least one lens included in thefocusing lens group with the d line as a reference is vdf, ConditionalExpression (5) is satisfied,60<vdf   (5).
 10. The zoom lens according to claim 9, wherein assumingthat a refractive index of the lens disposed so as to be closest to theobject side at the d line is Nd1, Conditional Expression (7) issatisfied,1.7<Nd1<2.1   (7).
 11. The zoom lens according to claim 10, a lens ofwhich a convex surface faces the image side is disposed closest to animage side in the fifth lens group.
 12. An imaging apparatus comprising:the zoom lens according to claim 1.